I used to believe price action told a story. Not just any story— a rational one . Earnings go up, stock goes up. Fundamentals deteriorate, price adjusts. Supply meets demand somewhere in a tidy equilibrium where logic wins, spreadsheets reign, and everything eventually makes sense. Then I started paying attention to ETF flows. And just like that, the illusion cracked. I Thought I Was Trading Companies. Turns Out I Was Trading Plumbing. There’s a humbling moment every investor hits when they realize they’re not actually trading businesses—they’re trading vehicles. In my case, it hit while watching the Nasdaq. I’d be deep in analysis mode—revenue growth, margins, guidance, TAM expansion—feeling like a disciplined, rational market participant. Meanwhile, the price would whip around like it just drank three energy drinks and forgot what gravity is. Why? Flows. Not fundamentals. Not valuation. Not even sentiment in the traditional sense. Just… flows. Money in. Price up. Money o...
Yield Without Selling: Covered Call Income in High-Growth Markets (Or How I Learned to Love Getting Paid While Doing Nothing… Kind Of)
I used to think income investing meant one thing: buy something boring, collect a dividend, pretend I’m excited about quarterly payouts like it’s 1997 and CDs still mattered. Then I discovered something far more interesting. Getting paid… without selling. Not in a shady, late-night infomercial way. Not in a “passive income guru who definitely rented that Lamborghini” kind of way. I mean real, structured, repeatable income—generated from stocks I already wanted to own anyway. Enter: covered calls. And yes, I know—half of you just leaned forward, and the other half mentally checked out because “options” sounds like something you need a PhD, three monitors, and emotional detachment from money to understand. Relax. I promise it’s simpler than Wall Street wants you to believe—and way more useful than most people realize. The Core Idea: Getting Paid to Wait Let me strip this down to its essence. A covered call is what happens when I: Own shares of a stock Sell someone else th...