Beginners
Guide to Options
What is an option?
An option is a contract giving
the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell an
underlying asset (a stock or index) at a specific price on or
before a certain date.
An option is a derivative. That is, its value is derived
from something else. In the case of a stock option, its value
is based on the underlying stock (equity). In the case of an
index option, its value is based on the underlying index
(equity).
An option is a security, just like a stock or
bond, and constitutes a binding contract with strictly defined
terms and properties.
Options vs.
Stocks
Similarities:
· Listed Options are
securities, just like stocks.
· Options trade like stocks,
with buyers making bids and sellers making offers.
·
Options are actively traded in a listed market, just like
stocks. They can be bought and sold just like any other
security.
Differences:
· Options are
derivatives, unlike stocks (i.e, options derive their value
from something else, the underlying security).
· Options
have expiration dates, while stocks do not.
· There is not
a fixed number of options, as there are with stock shares
available.
· Stockowners have a share of the company, with
voting and dividend rights. Options convey no such
rights.
Call Options and Put Options
Some
people remain puzzled by options. The truth is that most
people have been using options for some time, because
option-ality is built into everything from mortgages to auto
insurance. In the listed options world, however, their
existence is much more clear.
To begin, there are only
two kinds of options: Call Options and Put Options.
A Call option is an option to buy a stock at a
specific price on or before a certain date. In this way, Call
options are like security deposits.
If, for example,
you wanted to rent a certain property, and left a security
deposit for it, the money would be used to insure that you
could, in fact, rent that property at the price agreed upon
when you returned.
If you never returned, you would
give up your security deposit, but you would have no other
liability. Call options usually increase in value as the value
of the underlying instrument increases.
When you buy a
Call option, the price you pay for it, called the option
premium, secures your right to buy that certain stock at a
specified price, called the strike price.
If you decide
not to use the option to buy the stock, and you are not
obligated to, your only cost is the option
premium.
Put options are options to sell
a stock at a specific price on or before a certain date. In
this way, Put options are like insurance policies.
If
you buy a new car, and then buy auto insurance on the car, you
pay a premium and are, hence, protected if the asset is
damaged in an accident. If this happens, you can use your
policy to regain the insured value of the car. In this way,
the put option gains in value as the value of the underlying
instrument decreases.
If all goes well and the
insurance is not needed, the insurance company keeps your
premium in return for taking on the risk.
With a Put
option, you can "insure" a stock by fixing a selling
price.
If something happens which causes the stock
price to fall, and thus, "damages" your asset, you can
exercise your option and sell it at its "insured" price
level.
If the price of your stock goes up, and there is
no "damage," then you do not need to use the insurance, and,
once again, your only cost is the premium.
This is the
primary function of listed options, to allow investors ways to
manage risk.
Types Of Expiration
There are two different types
of options with respect to expiration. There is a European
style option and an American style option. The European style
option cannot be exercised until the expiration date. Once an
investor has purchased the option, it must be held until
expiration. An American style option can be exercised at any
time after it is purchased. Today, most stock options which
are traded are American style options. And many index options
are American style. However, there are many index options
which are European style options. An investor should be aware
of this when considering the purchase of an index
option.
Options Premiums
An option Premium is
the price of the option. It is the price you pay to purchase
the option. For example, an XYZ May 30 Call (thus it is an
option to buy Company XYZ stock) may have an option premium of
Rs.2.
This means that this option costs Rs. 200.00.
Why? Because most listed options are for 100 shares of stock,
and all equity option prices are quoted on a per share basis,
so they need to be multiplied times 100. More in-depth pricing
concepts will be covered in detail in other
section.
Strike Price
The Strike (or
Exercise) Price is the price at which the underlying security
(in this case, XYZ) can be bought or sold as specified in the
option contract.
For example, with the XYZ May 30 Call,
the strike price of 30 means the stock can be bought for Rs.
30 per share. Were this the XYZ May 30 Put, it would allow the
holder the right to sell the stock at Rs. 30 per
share.
Expiration Date
The Expiration Date is
the day on which the option is no longer valid and ceases to
exist. The expiration date for all listed stock options in the
U.S. is the third Friday of the month (except when it falls on
a holiday, in which case it is on Thursday).
For
example, the XYZ May 30 Call option will expire on the third
Friday of May.
The strike price also helps to identify
whether an option is in-the-money, at-the-money, or
out-of-the-money when compared to the price of the underlying
security. You will learn about these terms
later.
Exercising Options
People who buy
options have a Right, and that is the right to
Exercise.
For a Call exercise, Call holders may buy
stock at the strike price (from the Call seller).
For a
Put exercise, Put holders may sell stock at the strike price
(to the Put seller).
Neither Call holders nor Put
holders are obligated to buy or sell; they simply have the
rights to do so, and may choose to Exercise or not to Exercise
based upon their own logic.
Assignment of
Options
When an option holder chooses to exercise an
option, a process begins to find a writer who is short the
same kind of option (i.e., class, strike price and option
type). Once found, that writer may be Assigned.
This
means that when buyers exercise, sellers may be chosen to make
good on their obligations.
For a Call assignment, Call
writers are required to sell stock at the strike price to the
Call holder.
For a Put assignment, Put writers are
required to buy stock at the strike price from the Put
holder.
Types of options
There are two types
of options - call and put. A call gives the buyer the right,
but not the obligation, to buy the underlying instrument. A
put gives the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to sell
the underlying instrument.
Selling a call means that
you have sold the right, but not the obligation, for someone
to buy something from you. Selling a put means that you have
sold the right, but not the obligation, for someone to sell
something to you.
Strike price
The
predetermined price upon which the buyer and the seller of an
option have agreed is the strike price, also called the
exercise price or the striking price. Each option on a
underlying instrument shall have multiple strike
prices.
In the money:
Call option -
underlying instrument price is higher than the strike
price.
Put option - underlying instrument price is lower
than the strike price.
Out of the money:
Call option
- underlying instrument price is lower than the strike
price.
Put option - underlying instrument price is higher
than the strike price.
At the money:
The
underlying price is equivalent to the strike
price.
Expiration day
Options have finite
lives. The expiration day of the option is the last day that
the option owner can exercise the option. American options can
be exercised any time before the expiration date at the
owner's discretion.
Thus, the expiration and exercise
days can be different. European options can only be exercised
on the expiration day.
Underlying
Instrument
A class of options is all the puts and calls
on a particular underlying instrument. The something that an
option gives a person the right to buy or sell is the
underlying instrument. In case of index options, the
underlying shall be an index like the Sensitive index (Sensex)
or S&P CNX NIFTY or individual
stocks.
Liquidating an option
An option can
be liquidated in three ways A closing buy or sell, abandonment
and exercising. Buying and selling of options are the most
common methods of liquidation. An option gives the right to
buy or sell a underlying instrument at a set
price.
Call option owners can exercise their right to
buy the underlying instrument. The put option holders can
exercise their right to sell the underlying instrument. Only
options holders can exercise the option.
In general,
exercising an option is considered the equivalent of buying or
selling the underlying instrument for a consideration. Options
that are in-the-money are almost certain to be exercised at
expiration.
The only exceptions are those options that
are less in-the-money than the transactions costs to exercise
them at expiration.
Most option exercise occur within a
few days of expiration because the time premium has dropped to
a negligible or non-existent level.
An option can be
abandoned if the premium left is less than the transaction
costs of liquidating the same.
Option
Pricing
Options prices are set by the negotiations
between buyers and sellers. Prices of options are influenced
mainly by the expectations of future prices of the buyers and
sellers and the relationship of the option's price with the
price of the instrument.
An option price or premium has
two components : intrinsic value and time or extrinsic
value.
The intrinsic value of an option is a function
of its price and the strike price. The intrinsic value equals
the in-the-money amount of the option.
The time value of an
option is the amount that the premium exceeds the intrinsic
value. Time value = Option premium - intrinsic value.
Beginner's Guide to Option Trading and Investing in
Call and Put Options. |