Stock Options: Limited Loss and Unlimited Profit
By Sir Jon Weaver
Advertisements:
Many people believe that the stock market can make you rich one
day, but also make you bankrupt the next. Well, how eould you
like to know about a method of stock trading that completely saves
you from unlimited loss, but still leaves the door open for unlimited
profit? That method is buying and selling stock options. How to
trade stock options would best be explained using the following
example.
Lets say a person who thought that a stock selling in the market
at 50 would decline to possibly 30, that person could buy a Put
stock option. Not, however, that in buying a stock options, one
should have some idea to what extent the stock might move.
In inquiring what a Put stock option would cost, the person might
receive a nominal quote of, say, $350 for a Put at the market
for 90 days. Most options are negotiated "at the market,"
which means at "the current market," when the option
can be obtained by the option-dealer.
Suppose that the stock is selling at 50 and the quoted price
of $350 is satisfactory to you. You enter your order: "Buy
a 90-day Put on 100 XYZ [the name of the stock] for $350."
If you are trading through your stock-exchange broker, the broker
will give your order to an option-dealer who will contact one
of their clients who sells options on that stock and will attempt
to buy the option for you.
When, after this contact or several others, the dealer has obtained
the Put option for you, the dealer reports to the stock-exchange
broker who gave him the order, and the broker in turn reports
to the customer: "Bought Put 100 XYZ at 50 expires December
30 for $350." Let us say that the person who bought the Put
option, expecting a decline in the stock, was wrong, and that
the stock, instead of going to 30 (as expected), advanced to 70
and was selling when his option expired. The person would have
lost the $350 that they paid for the Put option.
Bear in mind that the limit of the person's loss was the cost
of the Put option, or $350, no matter how high the stock rose
and no matter how wrong the person was, and that the person would
draw on the equity in the account to that extent only. Suppose,
on the other hand, the person had sold the stock short in the
market. The loss would have been 20 points and still no knowledge
as to the possible extent of loss until the person covered the
short sale. But in the purchase of the Put option the account
would read:
Bought Put on XYZ at 50 for 90 days: Loss $350
Remember, too, that no trade has been made in the stock, so no
stock-exchange commission has been paid. A regular stock- exchange
commission is charged by your broker only if a transfer of stock
is made in connection with the option.
On the other hand, suppose the person's judgment was correct
and the stock declined to 30. If the person had instructed the
stockbroker to buy 100 shares at 30 and exercise the Put option,
the account would look like this:
Sold 100 shares at 50 (through exercise of Put)
$5,000
Total Receipts $5,000
Bought 100 shares in market at 30 3,000
Bought Put at 50
Cost 350
Total Cost 3,350
Profit on trade $1,650
The profit then would be almost 500 percent of the cost of the
Put contract. The profit is the difference between the cost of
the stock plus the cost of the Put option and the proceeds of
the Put that was exercised.
In all of these examples showing the use of options, the commission
cost has been ignored. But at no time could the loss have been
more than the cost of the option - $350 - and any stock-exchange
commissions would have been paid out of profit or out of possible
recovery of part of the premium which was paid.
by Sir Jon Weaver
For more FREE information and articles on how to correctly buy stock
options, when to trade, when to not trade, tips, tricks and advice.
http://www.UnderstandStockOptions.com
Published - November 2005
|