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Options Trading

Options trading, once a highly specialized niche reserved for Wall Street experts, has exploded into the mainstream with the rise of online trading.

Now, regular investors can take advantage of the leverage afforded by using call and put contracts, spreads and straddles to hedge risk and amplify their gains. But before you can start, you need to understand the fundamentals of the options market.

A long option is a contract giving you the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell a specific security at a specific price over a specific period of time. After that period of time has elapsed (the option’s “expiration”), the option ceases to exist.

A short option contract (where you sell a call or a put) is more akin to selling insurance, where you collect premium in exchange for taking on the obligation to buy or sell shares at the strike price for a fixed period of time.

A long call option gives you the right to buy the security.

A long put option gives you the right to sell the security.

There are numerous types of options trades. Depending on which method you choose, options trading can be used to hedge a portfolio, create yield or gain significant market exposure and returns with little capital risk.

Options contracts typically represent 100 shares of the underlying stock or ETF. So, if you exercise a call, you’re buying 100 shares of the underlying stock; if you exercise a put, you are selling the underlying 100 shares at a stated price—known as the “strike price.”

However, most options contracts are never exercised, with traders generally preferring to sell the contract prior to expiration at either a gain or a loss depending on the performance of the underlying asset.

While there are a variety of option trading terms that are unique to this type of investment, here are a few that can help you learn more:

Options Premium: This is also known as the options “price.” The potential loss for the holder of an option is limited to the premium paid for the contract. On the other hand, the initial premium can offset potential losses or generate income for the seller of the option.

Time Decay: All options are wasting assets whose time value erodes by expiration—and that erosion is called “time decay.” The more time remaining until expiration day, the higher the premium will be. That’s because the longer an option’s life, the greater the possibility that the underlying share price will move to make the option in the money.

Implied Volatility: If the market becomes volatile, or if volatility is expected, implied volatility will rise, thereby increasing options prices. Conversely, low market volatility lowers options prices. The Chicago Board of Options Exchange Volatility Index (VIX)—a.k.a. the investor “fear gauge”—is the best way to measure near-term volatility in the S&P 500. It represents the market’s volatility expectations over the next 30 days.

Want to learn more? Let our options expert Jacob Mintz explain more about options basics, and his own personal options strategies. Jacob runs three options services for Cabot Wealth Network: Cabot Options Trader, catered to options beginners; Cabot Options Trader Pro, for more experienced options traders; and Cabot Profit Booster, which trades covered calls on one momentum stock each weed recommended by our resident growth investing expert Mike Cintolo in his Cabot Top Ten Trader advisory.

Jacob carefully assesses the risk and reward of each one of his options trades. When he buys options, he risks pennies to make dollars. When he sells options, he does so with defined risk to avoid big losses. Sometimes Jacob uses conservative options strategies to hit singles; other times he uses more aggressive strategies to try to hit home runs.

Despite its growing popularity, options trading remains widely misunderstood by the investing public. We encourage you to read and learn more, and, if you’re ready, to take advantage of the expert guidance of Cabot’s options services.

Options Trading Post Archives
The S&P 500 is essentially unchanged since Thanksgiving 2014! While there have been short periods of volatility (in just the last two weeks, it’s been down 5% then up 5%!), the S&P 500 can’t seem to break through the 2,000–2,100 range. With the market stuck in this range, and banks and bonds offering virtually zero yield, how can investors get ahead? One strategy that has been working well for investors is to buy the best dividend-paying stocks and apply an options strategy called a buy-write (also known as a covered call).
VIDEO: After falling 5.38% following the Brexit vote, the market snapped back 3.5% in the past several days as traders gained a better understanding of the Brexit consequences. In this video, I highlight the bullish and bearish signals I see now in the options market, and offer my thoughts on the market going forward.
VIDEO: The talk of the trading world right now is the huge move higher in the VIX. I have three theories on why the VIX has surged 50% in recent days.
Insider trading is an unfortunate reality of the stock market, but options trading allows you to legally profit from some of these nefarious moves.
Divorcing one’s personal beliefs from a company’s products and its stock can be extremely challenging. However, a look at the stock’s performance and options trading can go a long way to helping investors avoid their personal biases.
Many traders and large hedge funds trade strictly in merger arbitrage. These traders look at deals that have already been announced, and examine the deal terms and the levels the stocks are trading. If they think the chances of the merger going through are great, but the stock being acquired is trading below where it “should,” they see opportunity and will often buy shares (or call options or take some other bullish position). In the case of Pfizer-Allergan, there was plenty of “opportunity.”
One of the big stories this week was that the U.S. Treasury Department announced new rules that would limit companies’ ability to participate in inversions. The new rules put the Pfizer (PFE) and Allergen (AGN) merger in peril. And I took an interest in this because I had an open position in PFE, owning call options (a bullish position) since January.
Criticizing Wall Street and major U.S. companies—especially pharmaceuticals—is very popular these days. For Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump, the evils of Wall Street, the major banks and the drug industry are very popular talking points on the campaign trail. And perhaps in reaction to this negativity, leading bank stocks such as Goldman Sachs (GS) and Bank of America (BAC) are down 14.50% and 20% respectively just this year.
Yesterday was another extremely volatile day in the stock market for options traders. Being patient is challenging for many traders, and especially options traders. We’re often looking for the next home run. However, in this environment, patience is key.
As the market was unwinding, the question I often heard from subscribers of Cabot Options Trader and Cabot Options Trader Pro, was “what stocks were on your watch list to buy?” My answer was always the same: look at the Daily Order Flow Reading email that I send every day for the best ideas on what to short and what to buy.
If you had invested exclusively in the S&P 500 ETF (SPY) last year, you would have finished the year down 0.81%. But if you had applied the very basic options strategy called a Buy-Write, you would have easily beaten those results.
Every three to six months, I will revisit some of the important themes and strategies used by Cabot Options Trader since I became the editor.
A covered call is a strategy in which the trader holds a long position in a stock and writes (sells) a call option on the same stock in an attempt to generate income or lower the cost basis on the stock purchase.
2015 has been a challenging year for most investors. And if this year taught us anything, it’s that options need to be a part of every trader’s playbook.