ask the prediction engine
Ask MarketPicks what is moving and why.
Search any ticker to open the full prediction page with ensemble votes, live quote fallback, headlines, target context, thesis, and risk warnings.
Not financial advice. MarketPicks.ai is an impersonal research tool. AI output can be wrong. Investing involves risk of loss. Do your own research and consult a licensed professional. Full disclaimer.
Puts & calls simulator
Search any ticker, set a strike, premium, target price, and contract count. The simulator shows what a small investment can become if the move hits, plus breakeven, max premium at risk, and parlay-style long shots.
ask the prediction engine
Search any ticker to open the full prediction page with ensemble votes, live quote fallback, headlines, target context, thesis, and risk warnings.
long option payoff
This is a long-option payoff model. It does not price implied volatility, spreads, commissions, assignment, or early exercise.
puts and calls parlay of the week
Questerre successfully tests HCCO® Technology in a Commercial-Sized Vessel at PX Energy
Questerre successfully tests HCCO® Technology in a Commercial-Sized Vessel at PX Energy
Questerre successfully tests HCCO® Technology in a Commercial-Sized Vessel at PX Energy
Questerre successfully tests HCCO® Technology in a Commercial-Sized Vessel at PX Energy
Questerre successfully tests HCCO® Technology in a Commercial-Sized Vessel at PX Energy
Questerre successfully tests HCCO® Technology in a Commercial-Sized Vessel at PX Energy
Questerre successfully tests HCCO® Technology in a Commercial-Sized Vessel at PX Energy
Questerre successfully tests HCCO® Technology in a Commercial-Sized Vessel at PX Energy
A call gives the buyer upside exposure if the underlying rises above the strike plus premium. A put gives downside exposure if it falls below the strike minus premium.
One standard stock option controls 100 shares. That leverage can turn a small premium into a large gain, but the same premium can also go to zero.
Options-style contracts existed for centuries, but listed standardized options expanded after the Chicago Board Options Exchange launched in 1973.
Option “parlays” here are model-backed stacks of high-upside ideas. They are not guaranteed returns and should be treated as research scenarios.