2ndSifter
2ndSifter OP t1_j28q5bh wrote
Reply to comment by GoldIndependent6 in Progressive: The Valuation Enigma by 2ndSifter
Purchasing a PUT or CALL gives an investor the right, but not the obligation to purchase 100 shares at the underlying strike price. Given that options are contracts, shares typically never change hands.
2ndSifter OP t1_j27a70r wrote
Reply to comment by nyse125 in Progressive: The Valuation Enigma by 2ndSifter
Fair analysis
2ndSifter OP t1_j26ytsx wrote
Reply to comment by Guzxxxy in Progressive: The Valuation Enigma by 2ndSifter
Why?
2ndSifter OP t1_j26bxsn wrote
Reply to comment by PotatoWriter in Progressive: The Valuation Enigma by 2ndSifter
For you, Mason, not for me
2ndSifter OP t1_j25t8uy wrote
Reply to comment by g1ucose in Progressive: The Valuation Enigma by 2ndSifter
I have but feeble offerings
2ndSifter OP t1_j25ama3 wrote
Reply to comment by sourpatch112 in Progressive: The Valuation Enigma by 2ndSifter
I have 2 PGR $130 PUTS exp 01/20/2023 and 1 PGR $90 PUT exp 05/19/2023
2ndSifter OP t1_j24ssxn wrote
Reply to comment by 0dteSPYFDs in Progressive: The Valuation Enigma by 2ndSifter
Thanks for adding this. I don’t think there’s a risk of insolvency soon, but there is some pretty significant unwinding to come.
2ndSifter OP t1_j24que3 wrote
Reply to comment by Not1random1enough in Progressive: The Valuation Enigma by 2ndSifter
Low beta usually keeps people away from options on stocks like these, but that’s the beauty of volatility. It’s unexpected
2ndSifter OP t1_j24j3jn wrote
Reply to comment by YallGotMemes in Progressive: The Valuation Enigma by 2ndSifter
Critical thinking activated
Submitted by 2ndSifter t3_zy8y3e in wallstreetbets
2ndSifter t1_j1613ym wrote
Reply to am i doing it right?? by NebulaMean6128
Another brother lost to the yield
2ndSifter t1_j12a48o wrote
Reply to Doing my best by ConsiderationOne5943
You still have $0.74 to deploy
2ndSifter OP t1_j295i03 wrote
Reply to comment by 30DaysOfJumpFatigue in Progressive: The Valuation Enigma by 2ndSifter
Oddly, insurance companies began falling in 2006, when the collapse actually started. This is because the number of homes available for sale/insurable was cresting