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Many people light up at the mention of "rolling options" thinking they've found a secret weapon to turn things around. Honestly, this thing is not a shortcut to gambling—it's based on strategy, discipline, and respect for risk. I've seen too many people roll their positions until they hit the million-dollar mark, only to be wiped out by a single mistake. So today, I plan to explain the underlying logic and pitfalls of rolling options in the most straightforward way.
**What exactly is rolling options?**
Simply put, it's four words: "Close Old, Open New." It involves closing your expiring options position and opening a new contract with a later expiration date or adjusting the strike price. Why do this? The reasons are quite clear:
First, to avoid rapid time decay. As options approach expiration, their time value diminishes quickly. Rolling is like giving your position a fresh breath of life.
Second, to flexibly adjust the direction or leverage. If your bullish outlook reverses? You can switch from a call to a put directly. Or change from in-the-money to out-of-the-money to chase more outrageous gains.
Third, considering costs and liquidity. Longer-dated contracts usually have better liquidity, and sometimes the premium can be more cost-effective.
But there's a pitfall: each roll incurs fees and slippage. Frequent operations can gradually eat into your profits.
**How to achieve hundredfold returns from options?**
A hundredfold sounds like a fairy tale, but there are only a few ways to play it. I personally favor the third method because it's more friendly to beginners:
**The first is single-shot targeting**—turning out-of-the-money options into in-the-money. It's the most challenging but also the most explosive. For example, if Bitcoin suddenly drops 5% in the morning, you target near-expiry out-of-the-money call options (which are very cheap). If in the afternoon there's a violent rebound and they turn in-the-money, you could see returns of 50x or even 100x in minutes.