Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

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
Disney (DIS), which owns the rights to Star Wars, is one of the most talked about stocks in the market in the last several months as the newest movie release has shattered box office records. However, there have been growing concerns about DIS stock. Because of these growing concerns about the television business, I might look to buy a Call option on DIS rather than buy the stock.
Tomorrow the Fed is expected to raise interest rates for the first time in many years. What the market will do in reaction is literally anyone’s guess. That said, I can use the options market to price-in expected moves and risks.
Perhaps most difficult for the average investor this year is that even the sectors and stocks considered to be safe have been decimated. When steady stocks such as Wal-Mart (down 30% year-to-date), ConocoPhillips (down 22% year-to-date) and Alcoa (down 40% year-to-date) are getting destroyed, it can be alarming. Can an investor who wants to own Nordstrom stock protect himself from the downside? Yes—by buying puts.
This is a favorite strategy of many top hedge funds, and even a strategy Warren Buffett is known to use. For example, Buffett is almost always short puts on the overall market because he’s willing to collect an insurance premium that the market will not fall dramatically.
Playing a competitive tennis match or tournament is a great deal like trading and investing these days. Going into a match, I rarely know the player, his style of play, or how I will approach the match. Similarly, these days in the market, every day is totally new, filled with unexpected swings. But as in tennis, in trading/investing you hit your best shots and put on your highest conviction trades—and over time, you will win out.
This strategy involves the selling of a call at a lower strike price, while simultaneously buying a call at a higher strike price. The maximum profit on this strategy is the premium you collect. The maximum loss is the difference between the strikes, minus the premium you collect.
Many of us are holding personal stock positions that have taken a beating this year. If you are long too many stocks in the wrong sector, the pain has been extreme. So how can you start to “dig out” of these holes? You can sell calls, using a “laddered” call selling strategy against these stock positions to lower our cost basis.
The top hedge fund managers in the world are as confused about the stock and bond markets as the rest of us. So what do they, and we, do in times like this? Tread very carefully. Don’t force trades just to have some “action.” Similarly, don’t be in a rush to buy the dip or sell the rip.
The market will be closed on Monday in celebration of Labor Day, so if the market does not make a big move tomorrow, the price of options will get hit extremely hard. Why do options lose significant amounts of value ahead of a long weekend?
I often get asked, “How do you choose which call to sell when executing a Buy-Write?” Another question I often get is about volatility. Here are answers, using ABT.
Cabot Options Trader and Cabot Options Trader Pro subscribers at the Conference asked me about many of their current stock positions on which they do not have options positions. I gave them ideas to create yield as well as hedge.
The biggest companies due to report during earnings season, including notes on volatility/price of options and recent order flow.
Micron Technology (MU) is a stock that we have traded in the past, and it’s held by many top hedge funds. The company reported earnings last night, and option activity in the stock has been interesting lately.
Option liquidity is a major issue in a stock like INVN versus GE. On average, GE trades close to 100,000 options per day. INVN on the other hand, only trades a couple thousand contracts a day. The time until expiration is another key component to the option width.
This morning I went back and looked at how a simple buy-write strategy would have performed in FB if executed the same way each month. The strategy would be to buy the stock and sell a call several dollars out of the money each month once the call initially sold had expired.