Funds and Options
Trading options is risky. While the risk is
limited to the cost of the option (the 'premium'), that isn't
necessarily small. A Google June 400 call can cost around
$2800.
The premium may be only 28, but an option contract is a
commitment for 100 hares. Hence the figure is multiplied by
100. Of course, for that commitment the buyer is controlling
roughly $40,000 worth of stock. ('Roughly' since the strike
price, $400, differs from the current market price, say $395 at
the time of the contract.)
Options, by nature, have an expiration
date. (That's part of what makes them an option.) As that
expiration date draws near, the worth of that option can
rapidly approach zero, depending on the current market price
and other factors. Hence, risky.
And that scenario only involves controlling 100 shares - not
much in the scheme of things.
One way around these difficulties is to invest instead in a
fund. Funds invested in stocks, bonds,
commodities, indexes, even futures or options - all the things
individual investors themselves trade.
Investors who purchase Funds (a mutual
fund or 'open-end' fund) own a portion of the instruments the
funds buy. The fund is managed by a fund manager, presumably a
knowledgeable and experienced investment professional. The fund
manager has (in theory, anyway) the available resources, time
and expertise to make investments that garner returns superior
to what the individual can make himself.
The investor in mutual funds pays a fee for the service, but
gets not only expertise and resources but also the advantage of
being able to pool funds (hence the name) with other investors.
That pooling allows control of many more shares, bonds, etc
than the average individual can.
This helps influence prices in that fund's direction. (If
you don't think so - and considering that many of them lose
money skepticism is warranted - look at a chart showing price
fluctuation against daily quantity bought or sold by the larger
funds. There's no question that large funds influence stock
prices, which in turn can influence their fund's value.)
For those investors interested in options, but without the
time, expertise or capital to profit from them options funds
are available.
Make sure you study carefully what the fund actually offers,
though. There's a difference, sometimes overlooked, between an
option on or from a fund and a fund that buys options.
Some funds actually purchase options contracts and
speculate just as individual options traders do. Since
funds control a larger amount of capital than individual
investors the 'multiplier effect' (leverage) of options
investing is increased further.
Other funds, though, actually buy stocks and then issue
options to the fund members on those stocks. That's a different
animal. This can produce profits for participants, but are more
like short term trades. As the share price rises, the options
are just exercised, limiting income growth opportunities.
Mutual fund investors tend to be more interested in the
long-term outlook and often seek income growth funds.
The same variety of options available to the individual are,
of course, there for the fund manager. Options on stocks, bonds
or commodities are commonplace, but one of the newer wrinkles
is options on ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds).
Funds that invest in these are actually speculating by
buying an option on a fund that's gambling on an index that
measures a basket of stocks. If your head hurts - and who could
blame you - maybe you should just buy stock.
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