0DTE options: should you bet on America's favourite?

Zero-days-to-expiration (0DTE) options are popular with US traders seeking high leverage, but consistent profits by betting on short-term market direction are slim

Rolling dice on stock trading charts and getting one one
(Image credit: Getty Images)

The S&P 500 index tends to rise or fall half a per cent in a day – a swing of 50 points or so. That may not mean much to a buy-and-hold investor but, to a trader, it’s enough for a spectacular gain if they employ sufficient leverage. With 20:1 leverage, for example, that half a per cent move in the index means a 10% move in the value of your position.  

But while using spread bets, contracts for difference (CFDs) or futures for that kind of trade will give you much more potential upside, you also have more downside if the trade goes against you. In some trades, the downside is – in theory – potentially unlimited.  

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Theo Casey

Theo is a former financial writer and editor, having written for reputable titles such as Euromoney Institutional Investor and Redwood Publishing. He has also appeared on-screen with Al Jazeera, BBC and CNBC and on MoneyWeek Theo covered funds, share tips and stockmarkets. He also edited the country's oldest newsletter with Lord Rees-Mogg for four years. Theo now runs his own content marketing agency for financial companies, and he is a seasoned CISI-qualified investment adviser.