Thinking In Options with Bill Johnson

LEAPS of Faith


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Retail traders love the idea of LEAPS. More time, more chances, better odds—right?

In this episode of Thinking in Options, we break down another dangerous trading illusion: the belief that buying more time creates an edge. Long-dated options are often treated like a loophole in pricing—"cheaper per day," "more time to be right," "four times the opportunity for only twice the price." It sounds logical. It feels intuitive. And it's deeply misleading.

Because in options, intuition doesn't set the price—math does.

We walk through why this thinking fails, using simple but powerful analogies—from mortgages to random walks—to show what's actually happening under the surface. While more time does increase the range of possible outcomes, it doesn't improve your odds of success. Every additional "chance" is already prepaid.

This episode explores:

  • Why more time ≠ more opportunity in options trading

  • How stock prices behave like random walks, not repeatable bets

  • The critical difference between variance (noise) and displacement (what actually pays)

  • Why option pricing scales with the square root of time, not time itself

  • How LEAPS can feel "cheaper" while quietly delivering less movement per day

The key insight: options don't reward how long a stock wanders—they reward how far it ends up.

LEAPS aren't a free advantage. They're a different way of packaging uncertainty—one you've already paid for in full.

Because in markets, there's no such thing as more chances for free… only more uncertainty, carefully priced.

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Thinking In Options with Bill JohnsonBy Bill Johnson