Options Trading Podcast

Are Weekly Options Riskier Than Monthly Options For Beginners?


Listen Later

In this episode, we cut through the social media hype of "retire by Friday" and get brutally honest about the calendar differences in options trading. We explore why weekly options are often seduced by the promise of fast profits but frequently end up as a "shortcut to blowing up your account" due to the accelerating power of time decay.

We break down the technical differences between the standard third-Friday monthly expiration and the rapid-fire weekly cycle. More importantly, we identify the "Silent Killer" known as Theta and why it behaves differently when you have days versus weeks for a trade to work out.

What does stacking small, consistent wins actually look like for you right now in your own learning journey with options? Subscribe now and let us know your thoughts!

Key Takeaways

  • The Silent Killer (Theta): Time decay is not linear; it accelerates dramatically as expiration approaches. Weekly options are essentially "milk expiring tomorrow," meaning their value can bleed away in hours even if the stock doesn't move.
  • The Precision Trap: Weekly options demand near-perfect market timing. Beginners often struggle because they aren't just predicting direction, but predicting it within a window of hours or days, leaving zero room for error.
  • Emotional Volatility: Because weeklies move so fast (jumping 50% or dropping 70% in minutes), they trigger "fight or flight" responses in beginners, leading to panicked decisions like cutting winners too early or letting losers run.
  • Probability & Flexibility: Monthly options offer a "cushion of time." They allow a trader to be wrong initially and still see a recovery or adjust the trade through "rolling," options that simply don't exist with weeklies.

"Think of weekly options like super hot sauce. Used carefully by a pro, they add flavor; but if you don't know their power, they’ll just burn your face off and wreck your account."

Timestamped Summary

  • 1:34 – The history of the Monthly Standard vs. the evolution of Weeklies.
  • 3:36 – Explaining Theta: Why time decay is the "Silent Killer" of weekly trades.
  • 7:19 – Side-by-Side: Capital at risk and why "cheaper" weeklies are actually more expensive.
  • 11:40 – The Pro Perspective: How experienced traders use weeklies as sellers, not buyers.
  • 15:42 – The Final Verdict: Why monthlies are the superior "sandbox" for learning.

Share this with a friend who's tempted by those 'fast money' weekly option ads! Leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify and tell us: Are you team Weekly or team Monthly?

Support the show

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Options Trading PodcastBy Sponsored by: OptionGenius.com

  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4

4.4

7 ratings


More shows like Options Trading Podcast

View all
Motley Fool Money by The Motley Fool

Motley Fool Money

3,228 Listeners

CNBC's "Fast Money" by CNBC

CNBC's "Fast Money"

1,354 Listeners

The Game with Alex Hormozi by Alex Hormozi

The Game with Alex Hormozi

4,471 Listeners

Stay Wealthy Retirement Podcast by Taylor Schulte, CFP®

Stay Wealthy Retirement Podcast

688 Listeners

The Option Genius Podcast: Options Trading For Income and Growth by Allen Sama

The Option Genius Podcast: Options Trading For Income and Growth

179 Listeners

Schwab Market Update Audio by Charles Schwab

Schwab Market Update Audio

359 Listeners

Thoughts on the Market by Morgan Stanley

Thoughts on the Market

1,317 Listeners

My First Million by Hubspot Media

My First Million

2,666 Listeners

Squawk on the Street by CNBC

Squawk on the Street

601 Listeners

Stock Market Options Trading by Eric O'Rourke

Stock Market Options Trading

304 Listeners

Barron's Streetwise by Barron's

Barron's Streetwise

1,573 Listeners

Halftime Report by CNBC

Halftime Report

423 Listeners

Forward Guidance by Blockworks

Forward Guidance

276 Listeners

Closing Bell by CNBC

Closing Bell

175 Listeners

WSJ's Take On the Week by The Wall Street Journal

WSJ's Take On the Week

148 Listeners