Комментарии:
I think an "Every Marketing/Advertising Term Explained" video would be great.
Ответитьevery engineering explained
ОтветитьHow do you make these videos
ОтветитьEvery powertool/tools explained
ОтветитьI know the illustrations are in paint but the actual icons for each term are nicely made btw : )
ОтветитьI think you should do shorts (Just upload bits of the video)
ОтветитьYou've basically started a new subgenre of simple explanations. I see copycats all over now, what do you think about it?
ОтветитьPlease do literary devices
Ответитьevery form of government explained
ОтветитьEvery medium of art explained would be cool
ОтветитьEvery philosophical idea/theory/belief.
ОтветитьI thought you stopped trying to cook after the attrocity that was thr paradoxes explained
ОтветитьStop asking him to explain genders. That would take more than 2 years
ОтветитьNow this is what I call content
ОтветитьPhew he reuploaded it
ОтветитьEvery emotion explained
ОтветитьEvery organ explained
ОтветитьFeels like studying for the SIE again
ОтветитьNext Crypto currency explained too
ОтветитьMe when I remember this being your second video posted
ОтветитьBro explains it better in 8 minutes then my Econ teacher in a semester
ОтветитьCan you do every computer term explained? Such as GPU, CPU, Memory, and then their processes (like bottle necking, over clocking, etc)?
ОтветитьEvery economics term explained
ОтветитьHere's my explanation of stock options from Plain Bagel's video:
Let's start with futures because they're easier to understand. A future is a contract between two parties to carry out a financial transaction at a certain point in the future (hence the name). For eg. A farmer and a grocer sign a futures contract that one year from now, the farmer will sell 100 kg of wheat to the grocer at 50€/kg. Why would they do this? To reduce uncertainty. It's the same as buying in bulk but in the future instead of right now. It's better for the seller because he no longer has to deal with the uncertainty of whether or not the wheat will be sold and it's also better for the buyer because he can buy the wheat at a cheaper price. Futures are very rigid, in that both parties are obligated to carry out the transaction only at that point in time.
Options are the same as futures with one key difference - the grocer is not obligated to buy the wheat from the farmer. He has the option/choice to carry out the transaction but not the obligation (hence the name). The farmer, however, doesn't have this freedom. If the grocer asks for the wheat, the farmer is obligated to sell it to him at the agreed-upon price. Options, unlike futures, are flexible. Which means that the grocer can ask the farmer for the wheat at any point during the life of the option, not just at the end (this is true for American options. In Europe, the option can only be exercised at the end of its life). And at the end, the grocer can also just not buy the wheat, which is called letting the option expire instead of exercising it.
So now you might be thinking, this sounds like a terrible deal for the farmer. Why would he agree to it? Because the farmer charges a premium for the option, say 20€ (unlike futures, which don't have premiums). Basically, the price of wheat may increase or decrease in a year. Instead of dealing with that risk, the farmer decided to have cash right now and get paid a small amount upfront (the option premium must be paid immediately). I guess he was a fan of the "A bird in hand is worth two in the bush" philosophy.
Options can be of two types: call and put. The easiest way to distinguish them is to look at who has the obligation. In our example, the farmer had the obligation to sell , which is a call option i.e. the farmer sold the grocer a call option. Now think of the reverse. Let's say that the grocer had instead given the farmer the option to sell the wheat. Now, the farmer is no longer obligated to sell, but the grocer is obligated to buy . This is a put option i.e. the grocer sold the farmer a put option (and charged him a premium for it too).
Unlike traditional transactions which take place immediately, options and futures take place later. Which means you don't need to have the underlying asset right now. Which brings us to covered/uncovered options. In our example, the farmer sold the grocer a call option for 100 kg of wheat. If he already has the wheat, it's a covered call i.e. the call is covered and the farmer has the ability to fulfil his obligation to sell. If instead he doesn't have the wheat yet, it's called a naked/uncovered call and should the grocer exercise the option, the farmer now has to buy wheat from someone else and then sell it to the grocer. As you can imagine, this is an extremely dangerous situation. This is why options aren't recommended for beginners. Conversely, a put option is an obligation to buy. So, if you have the money to do so already, it's called a cash-secured put. If you don't, it's called a naked/unsecured put.
As you might have realized, options can be created for any underlying instrument (commodities, stocks, bonds). Hell, you could even create options on existing options. What we're interested in right now are stock options i.e. the option to buy/sell shares in the future. In the stock market, an option contract always refers to 100 of the underlying asset. So if you want to sell 1 SPY option, you need to be able to provide 100 SPY shares ($49,500 as of Feb 2024). Again, this is why selling options is so dangerous. It's possible to burn your entire account on a single trade, no matter how much money you have.
I like to think of it like this: options are highly leveraged instruments and depending on who's providing the leverage, the game is completely different. If you buy options, you receive leverage, and it's not too bad. However, if you sell options, you provide leverage. You're basically acting like a bank and banks need to have a lot of money. That's a really dangerous position to be in. Keep that in mind. Selling options is a completely different world from buying options
Hope this helps :)
This one is much more high quality. Still enjoyed when you first uploaded it though
Ответитьwould be cool if you did all the complexes: ex, inferiority, god, etc.. (I would love to watch the explanations in ur style! Thanks!)
Ответитьevery country flag explained
Ответитьthis channel is very good
ОтветитьIts incredible how detailed we made this completely artificial and nonexistent trading system. None of this is backed by any real physical value, except the labour of people working for those companies. The ones who don't have the money to invest into this whole game.
ОтветитьI KNOW YOU USE PHOTOSHOP!!!!
Ответитьnuclear power terms explained
ОтветитьWould say this is more of financial instrument as a whole. There are some other things that could be covered like financial ratios, various risk types, takeover methods and protection and etc.
So... Part 2?
love that your mspaint drawings are actually getting better!
ОтветитьNice
ОтветитьI'm still trying to get over the fact that you gained 240k subscribers in two months. I watched your first video an hour after it released and you had like 48 subscribers. when did you get this many?
ОтветитьEvery physics term explained
ОтветитьWhy are there so many NPCs in this comment section
ОтветитьThis video will help me become a bell-ionaire through the Stalk market. I'm coming for you, Nook.
ОтветитьEvery court term explained
Ответитьnever seen those genders before 😮
ОтветитьEvery court objection
ОтветитьEvery ideology explained
ОтветитьEvery Greek hero explained?
ОтветитьIPO = Initial Public Offering
ОтветитьYou should do "every philosophy explained" next
Ответитьtaking econ rn thank you for this
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