Loading... Please wait...If you are new to options trading, this section will define what options are and explain the most basic concepts. It is important that you understand these basic concepts and terminology before you get into the more advanced topics, which are much more interesting (and profitable).
First, there are only two kinds of options -- calls and puts. You can purchase a call or sell a call. The same goes for puts, you can purchase a put or sell a put.
When you buy a call option, it gives you the right to buy a given asset at a fixed price (known as the strike price) anytime before a specified expiration date. The option writer (the person who created the option which you purchased), has the legal obligation to sell the asset to you at the strike price, if you exercise the option before the expiration date.
A put option is just the opposite. When you buy a put option, it gives you the right to sell a given asset at the strike price anytime before the expiration date. The option writer has the legal obligation to buy the asset from you at the strike price if you exercise the option before it expires.
The asset is usually referred to as the Underlying (underlying asset). Options are available for the following types of underlyings:
Two reasons, limited risk and leverage. When you buy an option, your risk is limited to the price you pay for the option. And from a leverage standpoint, it allows you to control an expensive asset for a fraction of what it would cost you to purchase the asset outright.
So, if you think that the price of a commodity is going to increase, you can buy a call option instead of buying the futures, or if you feel the price will decrease, you can buy a put option instead of selling the futures.
Now before you start buying options, a word of caution...
Why? Because they buy options and that's all they do. They don't take advantage of other option strategies. You should be aware that eighty percent of all options expire worthless. And to make matters worse, the general public buys options without paying attention to the fair value of the option and the implied volatility (all of this is explained later). As a result, they buy overpriced options and often wind up losing money even when they were correct about the price direction!
When you finish reading everything on this site, you will know how to actually take advantage of the factors that cause most people to lose money. You will learn how to put together safe, yet powerful, option strategies that can pull profits out of the markets under all kinds of conditions.
Options are traded on organized exchanges. This makes it possible for you to buy and sell options the same way that you would buy or sell futures. You need to open an account with a stock brokerage firm to trade stock and index options. Trading futures options requires that you open an account with a commodity futures broker.
Exchange listed options have standardized strike prices and expiration dates.
American style options can be exercised anytime before the expiration date. European style options can only be exercised upon expiration (right before they expire). Most options that trade on exchanges in the United States are American style. One noted exception, however, is the very popular SPX (S&P 500 index option) which trades on the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) and is a European style option.
An option writer is any person who writes (creates) an option. When you sell an option that you don't already own, you have just created a new option, and this makes you an option writer.
Call options that have a strike price below the current market price of the underlying asset are said to be in-the-money. And likewise, put options that have a strike price which is above the current market price of the underlying asset are in-the-money. For example, when corn is trading at 270.00, a corn 260.00 call option (260.00 strike price), would be 10 points in-the-money, and a 280.00 put option would be 10 points in-the-money.
This is the opposite of in-the-money. Call options that have a strike price which is above the current market price of the underlying asset are out-of-the-money. Put options that have a strike price which is below the current market price of the underlying asset are out-of-the-money. Continuing with the same example above, when corn is trading at 270, a corn 280 call option would be 10 points out-of-the-money and a corn 260 put option would be 10 points out-of-the-money.
When an option's strike price is the same as the current market price, the option is at-the-money. Actually, whichever strike price is closest to the market price, is considered to be at-the-money. So, if the corn's price is 270, the 271 call option and the 269 put option would both be considered at-the-money (even though the call option is technically 1 point out-of-the-money and the put option is 1 point in-the-money).
This is the price of the option.
Owning an option gives you the right to exercise it.
Remember, when you exercise an option, you only receive the intrinsic value. If the option still has time value, you would be throwing that away. For this reason, you normally don't exercise options that still have time value remaining.
In fact, only two percent of all options are ever exercised. Normally, when you buy an option, you will sell it before it expires (and take your profit or loss), or just let it expire worthless.
This is the rate of change in an option's price relative to a one unit change in the price of the underlying asset. For example, if a call option has a delta of 0.50 and the price increases by one dollar, the option's price should increase by 50 cents ($1.00 times 0.50). The characteristics of an option's delta, and how to use it, is covered in much more detail in our Delta Neutral strategy.
This is the rate of change of the delta. Let's continue with the example above where a call option has a delta of 0.50. If the call option has a gamma of 0.03 (for instance), it means that the delta will increase from 0.50 up to 0.53 when the price increases by one. It also means the delta will decrease from 0.50 down to 0.47, if the price decreases by one.
The time value of an option's premium erodes as the option approaches the expiration date. Time decay accelerates and becomes most noticeable during the last month before expiration.
This is a measure of the rate of time decay. It is the amount that an option's premium will lose per day due to time decay. It is usually stated in dollars per day.
This is a measure of how much an option's premium will increase or decrease due to a change in volatility.
Article provided by ThePitmaster.com