Introduction
What are Options?
How Options Work?
Using Options
- Benefits and Risks
- Options Strategies
Buying Calls
Buying Puts
Selling Calls
Selling Puts
Benefits and Risks
You may be wondering - why would an
investor want to get involved with complicated options, when they could just go out and
buy or sell stock? There are a number of reasons such as:
- An investor can profit on changes in a
stocks market price without ever having to actually put up the money to buy the
stock. The premium to buy an option is a fraction of the cost of buying stock outright.
- When an investor buys options instead of
stock, the investor stands to earn more per dollar invested - options have
"leverage."
- Except in the case of selling uncovered
calls or puts, risk is limited. In buying options, risk is limited to the premium paid for
the option - no matter how much the actual stock price moves adversely in relation to the
strike price.
Given these benefits, why wouldnt
everyone just want to invest with options? Options have characteristics that may make them
less attractive for certain investors.
- Options are very time sensitive
investments. An options contract is for a short period - generally a few months. The buyer
of an option could lose his or her entire investment even with a correct prediction about
the direction and magnitude of a particular price change if the price change does not
occur in the relevant time period (i.e., before the option expires).
- Some investors are more comfortable with
a longer term investment generating ongoing income - a "buy and hold" investment
strategy.
- Options are less tangible than some
other investments. Stocks offer certificates, as do bank Certificates of Deposit, but an
option is a "book-entry" only investment without a paper certificate of
ownership.
Options arent right for every
investor and are just right for others. Options can be risky but can also provide
substantial opportunities to profit for those who properly use this very flexible and
powerful financial instrument.