Eddy Alexandre releases Trading Options Like a Risk Manager
Veteran trader Eddy Alexandre releases Trading Options Like a Risk Manager, a framework-driven guide that applies institutional risk principles to everyday options trading
By Eddy Alexandre | Author, Trading Options Like a Risk Manager | ThePremiumDesk.com
Most retail options traders blow up not because they lack intelligence or ambition – but because they lack a system. They enter trades based on headlines, social media conviction, or the hope that a high-IV stock will “bounce back.” What they’re missing is what professional risk managers have always had: a structured, repeatable process for every market condition.
That gap is exactly what Trading Options Like a Risk Manager (The Premium Desk LLC, May 2026) was written to close.
Options give traders asymmetric leverage. That’s the appeal. But leverage without process doesn’t amplify skill – it amplifies mistakes.
Consider a trader who sells a cash-secured put on a stock because it “looks cheap.” They’re implicitly making a directional bet without verifying the volatility environment, without checking where Implied Volatility Rank (IVR) sits, and without a defined exit rule if the trade moves against them.
This isn’t speculation – it’s a description of how most retail traders operate. And it’s why most retail traders lose money trading options.
Professional risk managers don’t operate this way. Before any position is opened, they’ve answered three questions: What is the market environment? Does this strategy fit that environment? And what is the maximum acceptable loss?
The centerpiece of Trading Options Like a Risk Manager is the Six Conditions Framework – a structured decision architecture that maps every trade to a defined market environment.
The six conditions are defined by two variables: directional bias (bullish, bearish, or neutral/range-bound) and the volatility environment (high IV or low IV). Every market situation fits into one of six cells.
| Condition | Bias | IV Environment | Preferred Approach |
| C1 | Bullish | Low IV | Long calls, debit spreads |
| C2 | Bullish | High IV | Covered calls, cash-secured puts |
| C3 | Bearish | Low IV | Long puts, debit spreads |
| C4 | Bearish | High IV | Bear call spreads, defined-risk short premium |
| C5 | Neutral | High IV | Iron condors, strangles |
| C6 | Neutral | Low IV | Calendar spreads, long volatility |
The framework doesn’t tell you which stock to trade. It tells you how to trade, given what the market is actually doing. That distinction – between reactive speculation and structured decision-making – is the foundation of the entire book.
Implied Volatility Rank (IVR) is the single most underused signal in retail options trading.
IVR measures where current implied volatility sits relative to its own 52-week range. An IVR above 50 means options are priced richly – and premium-selling strategies carry a statistical edge. An IVR below 30 means options are cheap – and premium-buying strategies become more favorable.
Most retail traders never look at IVR. They focus on the underlying stock price, on technical indicators, on earnings dates. But the options market is a volatility market. Ignoring IV when trading options is like ignoring interest rates when trading bonds.
Trading Options Like a Risk Manager dedicates three full chapters to volatility analysis – how to read it, how to use it for strategy selection, and how to use it to time both entries and exits.
The book treats position sizing not as a secondary consideration, but as the primary risk control mechanism.
The core rule is simple: no single position should be sized so large that its maximum loss threatens the portfolio. But the implementation goes further. The book introduces a portfolio-level heat map concept – a visual representation of total risk exposure across all open positions, categorized by directional bias and volatility sensitivity.
This is how institutional desks think about risk. Every position is a piece of a portfolio, not an isolated bet. When one position is at maximum loss, the rest of the book should still be in play.
The practical guidance covers:
That last point matters more than most traders want to admit. When a position is in maximum drawdown, the hardest thing to do is follow the plan. The book is designed to make “following the plan” the default behavior – not the exception.
Trading Options Like a Risk Manager covers the full spectrum of premium-selling and premium-buying strategies, each mapped to the Six Conditions Framework:
Each strategy section includes entry criteria, position sizing rules, adjustment triggers, and closing rules – the complete operating manual, not just the concept.
Eddy Alexandre is the author of Trading Options Like a Risk Manager and a veteran options trader with more than two decades of experience managing real capital across every market condition – bull markets, bear markets, volatility events, and extended drawdown cycles. He is a verified 25% monthly return trader, a former financial newsletter editor, and the author of multiple white papers on finance and technology.
His educational platform has reached tens of thousands of traders worldwide. Trading Options Like a Risk Manager is the first title in The Premium Desk Trading Series. Upcoming titles include Trading Forex Like a Risk Manager, Trading Crypto Like a Risk Manager, Trading Futures & Commodities Like a Risk Manager, and Day Trading Like a Risk Manager.
Trading Options Like a Risk Manager by Eddy Alexandre is available now on Amazon (paperback and Kindle) and through ThePremiumDesk.com.
Publisher: The Premium Desk LLC
Series: The Premium Desk Trading Series
Website: ThePremiumDesk.com
Eddy Alexandre is the author of Trading Options Like a Risk Manager (The Premium Desk LLC, 2026). This article is intended for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice, investment recommendations, or a solicitation to buy or sell any security. Options trading involves substantial risk of loss and is not appropriate for all investors.