Call and Put
Options are contracts on some underlying trading instrument
- shares of stock, bonds, a commodity, a mortgage loan, etc.
(The list is endless.)
But regardless of what the option is on, there are common
features. One of the most basic is the contract feature
specifying what the option owner has actually contracted
for.
CALL
A 'call' confers on the (option) contract holder the right
to buy an asset at a stated price on or before a specified
expiration date. A right to buy, not an obligation. The call
owner always has the option to let his option expire. (Of
course, he then loses the initial money invested in buying the
contract.)
Call buyers are betting the underlying asset - the stock,
bond, commodity, etc - will increase in price before the
expiration date. And, not only rise, but rise enough to make a
profit.
How much is enough?
The price must rise enough to cover the difference between
the market price and the strike price (the price at which the
stock, say, must be bought). And, since the option itself has a
cost, the price has to rise enough to cover that additional
amount. That cost is called 'the premium'.
The cost (the premium) of an option - whether call or put -
is determined by several factors, including the price of the
underlying asset, the strike price, the time remaining on the
option, and others.
(The time remaining is particularly important. Simple common
sense suggests that if you have 90 days to exercise an option,
your risk is lower than if you have only one day. In 90 days
the price may well rise the several points needed to generate a
profit. With only one day remaining, the odds are lower.)
Suppose it's April 1, for example, and Microsoft (MSFT) has
a market price of $27. Call options for June 30 are selling for
$3 with a strike price of $30. You buy one contract for 100
shares.
So, if you held until expiration you either lose $300 ($3 x
100, the initial price of the contract not including
commission), or buy the underlying stock at $30. If the current
market price were $35 you've made $200. ($35 - ($30+$3) = $2
per share x 100 shares, ignoring commissions.)
When the market price of a share is above the strike price,
the option holder is 'in the money'. If the market price is
lower, he's 'out of the money'.
PUT
A 'put', by contrast, gives the option buyer the right to
sell an asset at a certain price by a stated date. The right,
not the obligation.
Puts are similar to 'shorting stock', in this sense. Put
buyers are betting the stock price will fall before the option
expires.
In this case the market price must fall below the strike
price in order to garner a profit from exercising the option.
(Ignoring the cost of the put, for simplicity.) Under those
circumstances, the option holder is 'in the money'.
For example, take the same situation as above but let the
option be a put. If the market price falls to, say $25, your
profit would be:
First, $3 x 100 = $300 = Cost of put, excluding
commissions.
Then, buy 100 shares at $25 per share = $2,500 to repay
broker 'loan' (since shorting stock involves borrowing shares
you don't own, then repaying later).
Finally, sell 100 shares at Strike price = $30, 100 x $30 =
$3,000
Therefore, your profit = ($3000 - $2500) - ($300) =
$200.
(Actually, the broker takes care of all the underlying
mechanics. The investor merely orders the trades at a given
time and date.)
Whether investing in calls or puts, wise investors do the
needed homework. Options trading is risky and somewhat more
complicated than simple stock trading. (Which is already
complicated and risky enough.)
Study the history, volatility, and other factors of both the
option contract and the underlying asset. Blindly throwing
darts at a board is the best strategy for losing money.
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