my channels
business · cars · dieting · diy · dogs · etiquette · fitness · frugal living · green living · health · home business · home improvement · jobs · parenting · self help · travel
more

personal finance, finance, investing, trading, options, option trading, stock options,
personal finance
finance
investing
trading
more...

Basic option trading: buying calls and puts


RELATED ARTICLES
Buying a Home? Get good advice.
Lease option a junk home to jump start your investing career in real estate
Option Trading is Like Baseball

Option trading in the stock market seems simple at first, but there are many different facets and strategies to trading options. Options can be traded on almost any stock or index.

How options differ from stocks

When you buy a stock, there is no time limit to owning it. Stocks don’t expire on some date and there is no time limit when you have to get rid of them. With options, there is a time limit to how long you can own them. At some point in time every option expires and you either just let it expire or you exercise it. Options usually expire on the third Friday of every month though some are different. Make sure you know when your particular option expires.

Terminology

A call option is one that you buy expecting the stock price to increase and a put option is an option you buy if you expect the price of a stock to drop. Underlying stock is the actual stock that a certain option if for. Strike price is the price at which your option is in or out of the money compared to the underlying stock price. Out-of-the-money means the option has only time value. At-the-money means that the strike price of your option is equal to the underlying stock. An in-the-money option means you are currently making a profit because the underlying stock price is above for call options and below for put options.

Buying options.

You can buy options as opposed to selling (writing) them. When you buy an option that gives you the right but not the obligation to buy or sell the underlying.

Value of options

There is what is called time value, and that means that the amount of time on any option remaining before the expiration date is valued at some value, the closer the option gets to its expiration date, the less time value there is. There is also the intrinsic value and that is the value of the option it is in the money. The value of options is also dependant on the VIX, which is the volatility index and current interest rates.

Buying Calls

When you buy a call you are expecting the underlying stock to increase in price in a given time frame, before the option expires. For example you think that GE is going to increase in price within the next six weeks. GE is the underlying stock of this example option. Today, March 8, 2009 the price of GE stock is $7.06. You think that GE is going to go to $7.50 or higher by the middle of April, so you could buy an April GE call option. There are many options in the chain you can buy. For this example you decide to buy a 7.50 April call option. What that means is that you expect GE to go to or above $7.50 before the third Friday in April.

That option will cost you .85 cents per option. Each option is 100 shares of the underlying stock. When you buy one option you are actually buying control of 100 shares. You decide to buy 10 of these call options. That will cost you $850. It is .85 x 100 shares per option x 10 options, which equals $850. You will now control 1,000 shares of GE.

These would be out of the money options since you own the $7.50 options and the stock price is below that $7.50. The 85 cents per option you paid is only for time value. The closer the option gets to its expiration date, the faster the time value will disappear.

If the price of the underlying stock, in this case GE gets above $7.50, the option is then in the money. It will be valued at the time remaining and the intrinsic value it is above the strike price of $7.50. You can sell your options at any time before they expire. If the price of GE gets at or above the strike price of $7.50, you can sell it at any time for a profit. If the price of GE wasn’t increasing as you expected and it is getting close to expiration, you can sell it before expiration to limit your losses. If you continue to hold the option until expiration and GE never gets to the strike price, it will expire worthless and you would lose the $850.

For example, the price of GE did increase and your options went up to $1.50 per option before expiration. You could sell those options that day for $1,500 for a profit of $650.

Most people trade options strictly for the leveraging that they give them and profit by the expected move and then sell the options for the profit. You have the right to buy the stock of GE as well from the person who sold you the call options.

For example, if GE goes to $8.20 before the expiration date. You can buy those 1000 shares of GE at the price of $7.50 per share. You would need to pay $7,500 for those shares. You would then have been able to lock in your price of GE stock at $7.50 and then purchase it, or you could immediately turn around and sell them at $8.20 per share for $8,200 and profit $700 minus the commission costs.

You might ask why instead of fooling around with options, why not just buy the stock of GE in the first place and not worry about expiring worthless. That is a valid question. It has to do with leverage and percentages. Buying GE for the $7,500 and selling for $8,200 is a gain of $700, a percentage gain of 9.3%. Using $7,500 of your capital to gain $700 is a gain of 9.3%. But using only $850 of your capital for a $650 gain is a 76% gain.

Put options

A put option is the same as the above concerning call options, except reversed. You buy a put option when you expect a stock or index to go down. Put options give you the right to sell the underlying stock but not the obligation. Again most people use stock options for the leverage and usually don’t exercise them for the actual stock. In the case of puts you think GE is going down to $6.50 or lower and you might buy 10 April $6.50 puts for .85 cents. This would cost you $850. If GE were to go to $6.00 before the expiration date, the option would have time value and intrinsic value and you could sell the options for the profit. Or you would have the right to buy those 1000 shares of GE at the current price of $6.00 and immediately sell them for the optioned price of $6.50.

Options are risky since you not only have to be correct about the direction of the underlying stock or index and you also have to be correct with the time frame as well. According to the CBOE about 30% of options expire worthless. That doesn’t mean to say that all the others were sold at profits, many are sold to limit the losses they are incurring before expiration. One of the most popular index options that traders trade is the OEX, which is the S&P 100.

Recommended research:

Chicago Board of Options Exchange is a great website to learn from (CBOE.com)

Getting Started in Options by Michael Thomsett 7th edition

Winning With Options by Michael Thomsett

Trade Your Way to Wealth by Bill Kraft


Disclaimer: Material on this Website is provided for informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional financial or investment advice. Information on this Website is general as it can not address each individual's financial situation and needs. [more]
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sam Montana
Internet research and writer
Colorado

MY STATISTICS
Level : Site Editor  [?]
158 Factoids published
123 followers & subscribers
+ 1018 positive votes
MY EXPERT RANKINGS
#1 in health
#1 in nutrition
#2 in wellness
ABOUT THIS ARTICLE
0 comments
Published 9 months ago
+ 3 positive votes
SHARE THIS ARTICLE



NEW ARTICLE ALERTS
Sign up for notifications when new knowledge articles are published in topics relating to this article:
 personal finance
 finance
 investing
 trading
 options
 option trading
 stock options
Email address:

Get published. Earn money. Gain Web cred.
Apply for a writer's account on Factoidz.

Related Articles
How to Stop Buying Food to Throw Away

Car buying tips: Selecting, negotiating, and financing your dream car

Why You Should Insist on a Buyers’ Agreement When Buying a Home

Buying a foreclosure? Buyer beware!

Buying foreclosures: Buyer Beware!

Day trading versus Swing trading: which job is better for you?

How to Avoid a Lemon When Buying a Car

Tradeking: sub-$5 trading fees, but is there a catch?

Republish this article [?]
You may republish this article with proper attribution to the author and Factoidz.
Click to highlight the text, then press Control+C to copy to your clipboard
Popular in Personal Finance
Budgeting: LEARNING to Take Control of Your Money

How to Choose a Fixer-Upper Home to Restore and Flip

How to Teach Your Children to Save Energy and Cut Bills Drastically.

Money: Disappearing as if by magic - when will it reappear?

Where to get your free credit report safely from the US government

Businesses partnering with PEO's can reap rewards in a down economy

View more Personal Finance articles
Popular in Finance
Where to get your free credit report safely from the US government

Credit Checks: the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Top 15 ways to make extra income

How To Lower Your Mortgage Using Obama's Making Home Affordable Act (MHA)

An investment strategy to profit from the legalization of marijuana

How to Sell and Make Money On Craigslist

View more Finance articles
More Related
Guide to applying for and repaying student loans

How to Minimize Your Student Loan Debt

Professional Sales Questioning Techniques: No Pain, No Gain

How grocery stores have adjusted to minimize shoppers' economizing - and how to get around it.

How to really get out of debt: not painless, but easier than you think

How a 1031 tax exchange works: Eight steps from start to finish

Tradeking: sub-$5 trading fees, but is there a catch?

How to minimize your investment property taxes by using a 1031 exchange and TIC / CORE

Comments & Questions
Leave comment
You can sign in to comment under your Factoidz account.

Your name:

Email address:

Homepage (optional):

Comment:

Notify me of new comments