What is
an Option?
An option is a derivative of a stock. This means it gets its value from the stock
it represents. You can buy weekly mini
options which represent 10 shares of a stock. Weekly options are options that
represent 100 shares of a stock. Both
the weekly mini and the weekly options come on the market Friday and can be
traded until the next Friday before the market closes. So these options have 7 days until expiration.
The monthly options come on
the market the 3rd Friday of the month and expire on the 3rd
Saturday of the month. (But remember the
stock market is not open on Saturdays, so you have to sell them on the 3rd
Friday of the month if you are not going to exercise the option). Exercising the option is when you have the
right but not the obligation to buy or sell 100 shares of stock, so if you do
not buy the 100 shares, you are not exercising the option, if you do buy the
100 shares you are exercising the option.
There are two types of options
contracts that a person can buy. The
contracts are called CALLS and PUTS. A
Call option is purchased by a person who is bullish on a stock. A Put option is purchased by a person who is
bearish on a stock. Buying a Call Option
gives the owner the right but not the obligation to buy 100 shares of the stock
at a certain Strike Price. The same is
true about the Put Option; it gives the owner the right but not the obligation
to sell 100 shares of the stock at a certain Strike Price.
The Strike Prices are set by the market. For stocks that are lower than $25, they have
a strike price every .50 Cents. For
stocks with a value greater than $25 and lower than $200, they have a strike
price every $2.50 For a stock that has a
value greater than $200, it has a strike price every $5. These are the strike prices that each
contract is set at for, both calls and puts.
This is how an options chart would look.
Let’s assume that Apples current price is $400 a share, and there are
weekly options, that expire at close of market on Friday.
CALLS STRIKE PRICE PUTS
Bid Ask
Bid Ask
$4.00
|
$4.10
|
$395
|
$3.80
|
$3.90
|
$3.90
|
$4.00
|
$400
|
$3.90
|
$4.00
|
$3.80
|
$3.90
|
$405
|
$4.00
|
$4.10
|
The Story
Let’s say that I won Publishers Clearing House and I have
check coming to me for $300,000, but I have to wait up to 30 days to get
it. I decide that day I want to invest this
money on a house. So the same day, I do
some serious research and I find a house that I want to buy. I visit with the seller and she tells me that
the house is worth $250,000 today, but the housing market is still weak, so we
are anticipating that the value of this is house could go down. I want this house because I am aware of some
information that she is not informed on.
I believe that the house this
land sets on has oil on it and if that is the case, I can make more money than
I spent on the property which is buying the house for a discount. I let her know that I am getting some money
and I would like to come back in 30 days the buy the house and I asks if she
can hold the house for me. She declines
the offer and says she just can’t take the house off the market to wait on me.
I then ask, if I pay her a premium of 1%
of the value of the house ($2,500) would she hold the house for me, and she
says yes, but the $2,500 is only to hold the house, I will still have to pay
the $250,000 for the house if I want it , no later than 30 days from
today. So she writes the contract, (because
she thinks the value of the house is going down and I will not return and she
will get the keep the $2.500) I buy the contract because I think the value of
the house if going up. So she gets
$2,500 to put the house on hold.
The contract states that I have the right, but not
the obligation to buy this house at $250,000…
It also states that whatever the
value of the house is everyday my premium will be adjusted to reflect 1% of
that value. (So if the housing market finds out it could be oil on this land,
it will adjust my premium to reflect 1% of the value of the house) It also states, that every day I will lose
some premium to time decay. Which is
$2,500 divided by 30 days which equals $833 a day. I will lose $83.33 a day until I buy the house. So If I come back tomorrow and the house is
worth the same value it was when I bought the contract, I will tell her I do
not want the house and she will give me back all my money except for the $83.33
I lost to time decay.
The next day, word has leaked on the housing market
that this land could possibly be rich in oil.
Everyone wants this house now, but the seller cannot sell to anyone else
because we have a contract. The value of
the house is now worth $750,000. This
means my contract premium that I paid the seller is now worth $7,500 already
making me a profit of $5,000. Now, I
have a choice to either cash in my option and tell the seller I do not want it,
this would be not exercising the option and I make $5,000 profit. Or I can keep
the contract active to make more money.
Even though the house is worth $750,000 now, I will only have to pay
$250,000 for it. So if publishers clearing house calls me and says
sir, we have your winnings ready early, I could just get the check and give the
seller her $250,000 and now put the house back up for sale and sell it for
$750,000 making a profit of $500,000. This
would be known as exercising the option.
So you can see in this example we made the most money by exercising the
option, but a lot of the times in real life, you make more money on the
premium, this would be buying calls and puts which is what I do.
But, that’s not the whole story. I left something out on purpose so it would
not confuse you. Remember the next day
when we came back and the house was worth $750,000? The market has 5 sisters working for it. Their names are Delta, Gamma, Theta, Vega and
Rho. These sisters are very important
because they decided how much money we made when the value goes up or
down on our contract.
Gamma
gave money to Delta, every time the value of the house went up $1.00.
Delta gave me the money
she got from Gamma and her money every time the house went up $1.00.
Theta took money from
me every day; this was the $83.33 we lost on the premium.
Vega, she controls the
demand of the contract. The more risk involved in the contract the more premium
is added to the price.
All of this is under the assumption I wanted the
value of the house to go up. It is the
total opposite for the seller of the house who thought the value of going
down.
This is a very basic look at options, it may sound
more complicated than it really is so do not let that scare you from learning
more about options. If I can do ,
anybody can. Please leave feedback.
Wow, this is very interesting. I have never had someone break it down like that. You can tell this is your passion. Good job Larry, you're helping a lot of people gain knowledge that they otherwise would never have known about.
ReplyDeleteI know I'm late super busy week for me 2 graduations K and 8th and meetings with my liar(lawyer). So a person could actually make money without ever buying an option? only paying the 1% and feeding the 5 Phoenician sisters.
ReplyDeleteNo. You have to buy the option. But you don't have to buy the stock that is in the contract.
Delete