Ken Trester

Ken Trester

Ken Trester isn’t just another “options educator.” He’s a pro who has been trading options since the first exchanges opened in 1973.

Ken is widely quoted in publications such as Technical Analysis of Stocks & Commodities and Barron’s. He has earned considerable respect as a financial analyst and a highly sought lecturer at investment seminars throughout the United States.

Ken has an MBA and has also worked as a stockbroker, an investment manager and as a computer science professor at Golden West College in Huntington Beach, California, where he taught a wildly popular course on stock options trading.

Recent Articles

10 Commandments for Successful Options Trading

What's the secret to making big options profits? Here are 10 simple 'commandments' that you can use to improve your options trading.

Commodity Futures 101

Learn the commodity futures basics to get started on your way to trading options on commodity futures, which is an excellent way to make big profits.

Bargain Hunters Beware

Stocks may look cheap now, but are they really? There's a better way to make money in this market.

Investor Jiu-jitsu – The 88% Strategy Credit Spreads

This strategy is all about using the market's momentum against itself to take advantage of leverage and pile on the profits month after month.

5 Ways to Profit From Volatility

The crazy volatility spike has some people shying away from trading, and they're missing out. Find out how to use volatility to your advantage.

Volatility: The Option Buyer’s Secret Weapon

Many experts claim that buying options is a sucker's game, but they don't understand the rules.

Give Yourself Time to Be Right

Risk is everywhere on Wall Street, conquer it with stock options.

Give Yourself Time to Be Right

Risk is everywhere on Wall Street, conquer it with stock options.

The Thrill of Expiring Options

A diligent trader can make big money buying expiring options. But you have to be ready to move quickly.

3 Ways to ‘Drive’ Your Options Trading Returns

If you find that a trade turns out to be a lemon, you can sell it back to its owner and test-drive something different that can turn out to be a <i>much</i> better investment!