Values and Prices in Option Trading
1
Part I
Unlike stocks, Options have an expiration
date. Unless a company goes bankrupt or buys back all its
stock, the stock investor always has the choice to wait for a
price correction. Sometimes that wait represents the triumph of
hope over experience, but more on that elsewhere.
That expiration date makes calculating an option's
value more complicated, but also more accessible to
some of the powerful statistical tools developed over the last
few decades.
Two of the more common methods for evaluating options
involve measuring their intrinsic value and their time
value.
The 'intrinsic value' is the amount by
which the option's strike price is 'in-the-money'. Strike price
is the contractually set price at which the underlying asset
would be bought or sold, if the option were exercised.
'In-the-money' means the strike price is lower (for a call
option) and higher (for a put option) than the current market
price.
For call options: IV = Asset
Market Price – Call Strike
Price
Since options have an expiration date, but are purchased on
some prior date their value changes as the expiration date
nears. That change in time results in a decay of the value of
the option as a trading instrument.
An option with two days remaining is generally worth less
than one that gives the investor three months to act. At
expiration the option is either in-the-money, in which case
profits are possible, or it's out-of-the-money and the investor
incurs a potential loss.
Time value is the amount by which the price
of an option exceeds its intrinsic value.
For call options: TV = Call Premium – Intrinsic
Value
[For put options:
IV = Put Strike Price – Asset Market Price
TV = Put Premium – Intrinsic Value
Note: The 'premium' is simply the cost of the call or
put.]
For options that are 'at-the-money' (strike price = current
price), or 'out-of-the-money' (strike price higher/lower
(call/put) than current market price) the option has no
intrinsic worth at that time. It only acquires value in so far
as the market price can change, i.e. it has only time
value.
For example, suppose MSFT (Microsoft) has a current market
price per share of $27 for a June 30 call. The '30' refers to
the strike price, not the expiration date. If the premium is
$2, the option is out-of-the-money - since: $27 - ($30 + $2) =
-$5.
I.e. if you bought the call and exercised it immediately
you'd lose five dollars (plus commission costs).
Since, the option has no intrinsic value (negative intrinsic
value isn't allowed), why would anyone execute such a
trade?
Because an out-of-the-money is less expensive than one in
the money and the further out-of-the money the cheaper it is.
There are many trading strategies that utilize this fact as a
hedge or for potential profit. Given a three month period, the
market price may well rise to more than cover the premium and
produce a profit. That's what makes options trading
speculative.
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