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 Friday Feedback:The "Return Of The Weeshump" Edition
Welcome back to “The Greatest Show in  Finance!”™
 As always, I’m your ringmaster, Mr. Great  Stuff … and today is Friday Feedback.
 
 If this is your first time joining the Great Stuff crowd, Friday Feedback is the day that we root through the Great Stuff inbox and answer your stock market and investing questions, indulge in your rants and generally run amok.
 
 Amok! Amok! Amok!
 Now, around here, we call our regular readers Great  Ones because, well, y’all are great just for being here.
 Awwwww…
 
 But if you want the true “Great One Experience,” you simply must write in and join in on Friday Feedback. It’s a rite of passage, after all.
 
 So, if you’re ready to be experienced, drop us a line at GreatStuffToday@BanyanHill.com. It doesn’t hurt … much.
 
 Anyway, without further ado, here is today’s main attraction:
 Greetings Mr. Great Stuff,
 After much  hemmin' and hawin' on my part, I bought some AMD in late January this year.  Some folks might say that my timing was bad because the share price has been  unkind to me over that short period of time. But here is the story that Great Ones will want to hear about this seemingly sad affair.
 
 I have sold calls every week on my 300 AMD shares with the following per share  premiums (listed chronologically): $1.46, $1.68, $0.21, $1.62, $0.64, $0.32,  and $0.74. That's $6.67 per share in income that Mr. Market has given me while  I wait for AMD to go to the moon.
 
 The moral of the story: selling calls can soothe one's pain if a stock purchase doesn't  go in one's favor right out of the chute.
 
 Maybe this little vignette can push the Musk man and HEVs off the page for a day. WHUT?!?
 
 Best regards and keep up the good work, The Weeshump
 Weesy? Is that you? We haven’t heard from you since June of last year, I think.                |  |  It’s  hard to tell now that our tech department won’t allow me to keep every single  email sent to the Great  Stuff inbox ever. Packrats gonna pack, IT guys gonna IT …  what ya gonna do?
 Well, Weesy … can I call you Weesy?  Or would you prefer Humpy? Oof … nah, you’re right. Weesy it is.
 
 If your mission was to bump Musk and  hydrogen off the Great Stuff page … mission accomplished! (For today, at  least … tomorrow is a different story.)
 
 And I love what you’re doing with your  Advanced Micro Devices (Nasdaq:  AMD) holdings!
 
 Great Ones, what Weesy has here is what we call a covered call position, and it involves  trading options. If you haven’t read Great  Stuff’s Options 101 primer yet, ya might want to go ahead and do  so … just sayin’.
 
 Or, if you want more direct information  on covered calls, click here.
 
 So, the idea here is that you bought a  stock that you really like — in this case, it’s semiconductor giant AMD. You  did your due diligence in researching the business, its income and earnings  statements, checked the charts and even set your investment return target.
 
 Unfortunately, Mr. Market didn’t want  to play along, and AMD stock dropped because … checks notes … tech is bad when interest rates rise. I don’t agree,  but it is what it is.
 
 Instead of crying over spilled  semiconductors, Weesy here decided that since Mr. Market wasn’t going to  cooperate, he’d make up the difference with options. Since Weesy has 300  shares of AMD stock, he can sell three AMD call options without any margin  requirements at all.
 
 Remember, an options contract  represents 100 shares of the underlying stock. So, one AMD call option controls  100 shares of AMD stock. This is true whether you are buying or selling the  option contract.
 
 By selling AMD call options, Weesy can basically get paid while waiting for AMD stock to rally. For instance, he  sold his first AMD call option for $1.46, or $146 per contract. As long as  AMD’s stock price doesn’t rise above the sold call option’s strike, Weesy gets to keep that money.
 
 The best part? He can keep selling AMD  calls like this every single month for as long as he wants, as long as AMD  remains below the sold call option strike. And if AMD’s price moves above that  strike, Weesy has to sell his AMD stock at the agreed-upon price … which  is the strike price of the sold call option.
 
 Since Weesy still has all 300  shares of AMD stock, it appears that his strategy is working nicely. Judging  from AMD’s options history, it appears that Weesy is selling AMD call  strikes at about 20% or so out of the money — i.e., the strikes of the AMD call  options he’s selling are 20% above AMD stock’s current trading price.
 
 This is a very, very smart move if you  want to keep the stock you’re selling calls on.
                  |  |  Now, selling calls 20% above AMD’s current price works for AMD … but it might not  work for every stock out there. After all, AMD currently sports implied  volatility of about 11%.
 This means that the market believes that AMD could move up or down 11% prior to option expiration.
 
 To be safe, Weesy added another  10% or so to his target so that he wouldn’t have to worry about losing his AMD  stock. I mean, there’s always the possibility that AMD will rally above your  sold call, no matter how unlikely, so be sure to keep that in mind.
 
 All in all, Weesy appears to  have raked in $2,001 by selling AMD calls — ($6.67 X 300 shares). Now, I don’t  know what you paid for your AMD stock, Weesy, but $2,001 will buy you  about 18 shares right now. Furthermore, AMD isn’t all that far from its late  January trading range — near $110.
 
 Seems to me you’re making out like a  bandit. This truly is Great Stuff. Thanks for writing in!
 
 Want a simpler look at the options  market? Look no further! It’s as easy as One…
 
 One, two, three? ABC?
 
 Nope, just One Trade.
 
 Y’all remember Mike Carr, right?  The creator of One Trade — not to mention the most impressive breakdown  of the Super Bowl Indicator I’ve ever seen?
 
 Well, Mike is prepared to make you  a bold guarantee. If he can’t show you how to double an investment  account in one year … he will work for a full year, free of charge.
 
 See why Mike isn’t pulling any punches with his latest strategy.
                              | 
 See? I told you it wasn’t all just hydrogen power and  Musk-related mischief ‘round these parts.
 Other days, we talk about options and pot stocks and … well,  options and pot stocks mostly. Feel free to write in anytime, any day, if  there’s anything any of you want to see covered.
 
 Anyway… On with the show!
 
 Daaaaaark Star  Crashes…
 Hiya Joseph,
 Greetings from a funny, cloudy little island full of Lords and Rings n things hanging off the edge of the South Pacific.
 
 You  spoke of a monster constellation forming in deep space (well, actually on a  stock exchange).
 
 The  constellation in view owns about 38% of a canopy company. Do you think this  galactic event will keep Canopy Growth growing? Or will it fade away into a  black hole?
 
 — GaZZa
                |  |  Thanks for stopping by the ol’ cosmic canna-lounge.
 My only thoughts on Constellation’s (NYSE: STZ) starry-eyed thoughts on Canopy Growth’s (Nasdaq: CGC) cannabis foothold … well, we’re back at our favorite congressional  crossroad once more: When’s broadscale legalization comin’, GaZZa?
 
 Rhetorically speaking, I mean, unless you have some canna  connections you’re not telling me about…
 
 Constellation knows its way around the  legal brew room … or at least, it can pull the right taps. (Phrasing?) But the  bud room is a whole ‘nother story…
 
 Now, I can’t speak for y’all pipeweed tokers out in  Hobbiton, but here in the U.S.? Broadscale legalization is Canopy’s golden  ticket — and Constellation’s too, by effect.
 
 Once those green gates open up nationwide — like actually nationwide — Constellation’s  investment in Canopy will create a drinkable cannabis market, the likes of  which have never been seen before. Obviously…
 
 So, if you were looking to invest in Constellation or  Canopy, well, ask yourself: How soon do you believe the U.S. market will be fully  legalized? (If … ever?) And how long do you have to keep holding out hope for  pot stock profits?
 
 If you don’t mind waiting, get your hacky sack out while CGC  shares kick around for a while. It’s got Constellation’s booze budget as backup  … it’s fine. Otherwise, investing in Constellation can get you on top of a  fully brewed alcohol market that’s right here right now … and maybe some  drinkable weedy greatness later on.
 
 Now on to your question … did you have a question? Did we  answer it already? It is Friday, right?
 
 Does Anybody Read Real ^&*% Anymore?
 Amazon bookstores in Malls in SD Ca. But they are never busy because they don’t have anything but books. That’s not what must people buy on Amazon 🤔
 — Valerie B.
                  |  |  Oh, Valerie … the  irony of this statement is killing me considering how Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) got its start in life.
 You’re right, though. Most people just don’t buy books anymore because most people don’t read anymore … at least, not the kind of reading that you and I (presumably) grew up  with.
 
 It’s all digital  digests and audiobook assortments now — assuming you can pry yourself away from  the social media machine long enough to concentrate on anything that doesn’t  give you blue light blindness.
 
 I don’t have a social media problem … you have a problem!
 
 Meanwhile, I’m just over here huffing that sweet, heady scent of decades-old paper … as  any tried-and-true book lover is wont to do. (I’m not alone in this, right? Or  am I the only one who enjoys the smell of a good book?)
 
 Anyway, Amazon!  It was always a matter of time before the one-time bookseller’s  brick-and-mortar business boarded up its doors. The real question is: If a  bookstore falls in the Amazon, does it even make a sound?
 
 Thanks for being a real human bean, Valerie — erm, I  mean a real Great One!
 
 Editor’s Note: Major Battery UPGRADE Coming To EVs
 
 Over the next decade, this could usher in a $51 trillion energy revolution that could change EVERYTHING…
 
 How you power your home, your gadgets, your workplace… It’ll all go from night to day — like flicking on a switch.
 
 This 20,300% market surge is only the beginning … and you  can buy in right away.
 
 Click here  for the full story.
 
 DW: Don’t Waste Words
 Space debris. Answer: No.
 I would be curious to hear your thoughts on  NWARF, HTZ and INTEQ.
 
 — DW
 Thanks for writing in, DW. You summed up my thoughts on space  debris … succinctly. As for NWARF, HTZ and INTEQ? Umm.
 Let’s see what we’ve got here: Over-the-counter  budget airlines out of Norway … a satellite internet service provider … and  Hertz (Nasdaq: HTZ), back from the dead. Let me put it this way, Great One:
  	  That said, I want to know why you’re interested in them. Seriously, why? Sell me on your picks, DW!
 Better yet, where are you trading  from? Are you a European investor looking for airborne stock advice? Or a  U.S.-based trader looking for a reason to jump into random micro meme stocks?
 
 Heck, I’ll open this up to the  global Great Stuff audience out there. Let me know in the inbox where you’re reading from! I’m curious just how many of y’all are tuning into  the show from overseas.
 
 Everyone is overseas to everyone else, Great Stuff, duh.
 
 TouchΓ©, and if you feel like  sharing where you’re at in the great wide world, give us a shout and get the  worldwide conversation going! I know there are some far-flung Great Ones out there (sometimes our  courier pigeons come back extra winded).
 
 Once you’re done yapping our virtual ear off in  the inbox, catch up on all the Great  Stuff you might’ve missed online at GreatStuffToday.com!
 |  In the meantime, here’s where you can find our other junk — erm, I mean where you can check out some more Greatness: Until next time, stay Great!
 Regards,
 
  Joseph Hargett
 Editor, Great Stuff
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