Thinking In Options with Bill Johnson

Bill Johnson

Join Bill Johnson, Head of Options Education at Market Rebellion, as he breaks down practical options strategies, trade structure, and risk management techniques designed to help traders improve consistency, avoid costly mistakes, and perform at a higher level across market cycles.

  1. The Most Dangerous Number in Trading

    18 Jun

    The Most Dangerous Number in Trading

    Most traders love talking about percentage gains. A 200% winner. A 500% return. A trade that "tripled overnight." But are those numbers actually telling you anything useful? In this episode of Thinking In Options, Bill Johnson examines why percentages can be one of the most misleading metrics in trading. While percentage returns have their place, they often hide the most important questions: How many dollars were actually made? How much capital was at risk? And what impact did the trade have on the overall portfolio? Bill explores the dangers of focusing on eye-catching option returns while ignoring position sizing, portfolio exposure, drawdowns, and the realities of risk management. Along the way, he explains why professional traders think differently than retail traders—and why translating everything back into dollars can dramatically improve decision-making. Topics covered include: • Why large percentage gains can be economically insignificant • The relationship between position size and portfolio impact • How percentage returns can disguise risk and losses • The mathematics of drawdowns and recovery • Correlation, concentration risk, and "fake diversification" • Why professionals focus on dollars, exposure, and portfolio heat If you've ever been impressed by a huge options return, this episode will challenge the way you think about trading performance and risk. Subscribe for more episodes of Thinking In Options with Bill Johnson, where we explore the concepts, misconceptions, and mental models that separate professional thinking from retail trading habits. #OptionsTrading #RiskManagement #TradingPsychology #Investing #Options #StockMarket #TradingEducation #PortfolioManagement

    17 min
  2. Limited Loss, Unlimited Confusion: The Loss Has a Ceiling. The Confusion Doesn't

    7 May

    Limited Loss, Unlimited Confusion: The Loss Has a Ceiling. The Confusion Doesn't

    Bill Johnson breaks down one of the biggest misconceptions in options trading: the belief that "cheap" options are low risk simply because the maximum loss is limited. Using casino analogies, probability theory, and real-world option structures, Bill explains why risk is determined by odds — not by the dollar amount of the premium. In this episode of Thinking In Options, you'll learn why low-priced options often carry higher probabilities of loss, how traders confuse limited loss with low risk, and why options are better understood as tools for adjusting risk rather than amplifying it. Topics covered include: • Why "limited loss" creates unlimited confusion • The difference between price and probability • Why options cost less than shares • How calls concentrate risk at the strike price • The misconception of "controlling shares" with options • Delta, gamma, theta, and vega explained conceptually • Why stock traders are effectively trading options too • How combining options can reduce or even eliminate risk • The hidden irony behind why options feel dangerous • Why structure matters more than premium size Bill also explores how traders misuse short-term out-of-the-money calls, why Vegas loves "small chip" thinking, and how professional traders use smarter option structures to shape risk and reward. Next week: The Dark Side of Trading — the hidden side of every trade most traders never see until it quietly drains their account. #OptionsTrading #StockMarket #TradingPsychology #Investing #OptionStrategies #RiskManagement #BillJohnson #ThinkingInOptions

    12 min

About

Join Bill Johnson, Head of Options Education at Market Rebellion, as he breaks down practical options strategies, trade structure, and risk management techniques designed to help traders improve consistency, avoid costly mistakes, and perform at a higher level across market cycles.

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