How I Made $1,184 with JD.com Using the Juicy Put Strategy (in Just One Week)
In a market filled with uncertainty, many investors retreat. But Mark Yegge — with his proven "Cashflow Machine" system — sees opportunity even in red markets. This week’s trade on JD.com (the Amazon of China) is a perfect example of how to create reliable weekly income without needing stocks to go up.
Here’s how he earned $1,184 in just one week on a $38,000 investment using the Juicy Put Strategy.
The Trade Setup: JD.com (Ticker: JD)
JD.com has been on Mark's radar as part of a broader bearish setup. While he doesn't claim to predict stock movements, he does follow chart patterns and probability. This week, the charts continued to signal weakness, and that was the cue to deploy the juicy put strategy again.
- Total Investment: ~$38,000
- Strategy Duration: 1 week
- Target Income: ~$1,184
- Method: Juicy Put Strategy (Bear Put Debit Spread / Covered Put Style)
What is the Juicy Put Strategy?
The “Juicy Put” is Mark’s unique spin on a traditional bear put debit spread — but with a twist. Here’s how it works:
- Buy long-dated, deep in-the-money puts to gain directional exposure (in this case, JD $65 puts).
- Sell short-term puts against them to generate weekly income (also called “juice”).
The short puts decay quickly, allowing Mark to roll them weekly and capture consistent profits — all while hedging with his long puts.
Rolling the Trade for Weekly Income
Mark started with 10 contracts but added 3 more this week as per his rules when the market moves against him. His logic? Use the dip to strengthen the position.
Last week:
- Sold $35 puts for $2.79
- Bought them back for $0.075
This week:
- Rolled 13 contracts to the next week’s $35 puts
- Collected ~$0.91 per contract
- Total income = $1,183
And all this was done without needing the stock to move at all.
Risk Cushion: Built-In Protection
Let’s talk risk. Why is this strategy so compelling?
- The long puts (JD $65s) serve as the “base” position.
- The short puts (JD $35s) generate income.
- Since these short puts are close to “at the money,” they offer maximum extrinsic value — meaning higher premium income.
- With 82 delta long puts, Mark is well-positioned if the stock continues to slide.
Even if JD moves sideways, the position remains profitable due to the weekly premium income.
Life-Improving Lessons from This Trade
- Don’t Panic in Red Markets
When others are fleeing, there’s often more juice to collect. - Use a System, Not Emotions
Mark’s trade follows a strict rule set — buy when market moves against, roll weekly, and focus on extrinsic value. - Income Without Prediction
You don’t have to guess stock direction — if you sell juice consistently, you profit consistently. - Leverage Can Be Smart
Using options (rather than owning the stock) lets you control large positions with lower capital.
FAQs
Q: What happens if JD.com goes up?
A: The short puts expire worthless, and Mark keeps the juice — a win.
Q: What if the stock tanks?
A: The long puts gain in value, offsetting the short put losses. The position is protected.
Q: Why not just buy puts and wait?
A: Because Mark isn't trying to predict. He wants weekly income, not directional bets.
Call to Action
Are you ready to stop gambling and start getting paid — no matter which way the market moves?
Visit CashFlowMachine.io to learn how
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Conclusion
This JD.com trade is another real-world example of how income-focused options strategies outperform passive investing — especially in tough markets.
Whether the stock goes up, down, or sideways, the key takeaway is clear:
You don’t need to predict the market. You just need to collect the juice.