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An Easy Way to Learn Options Trading

Wednesday Mar 31, 2010

By: Daniel Webb

This article attempts to set out the basic features that you will need to know in order to learn options trading. The moment you are done reading this article, you should be able to understand what an option is, how it works, and how you could maximize its potential to incorportae it in your trading strategy.

Back to basics

An option is a contract between the buyer (the “holder”) and the seller (the “writer”) that gives the holder the right, but not the obligation, to:

The subject of the option is whether to buy or sell an underlying asset.e. exercise the option) within a fixed period of time (i.e. typically before the option’s expiration date); and
* Carry out the above transaction at a predetermined price (the “strike price”).

As payment (consideration) for granting the option, the holder typically pays a premium to the writer (which in theory compensates the writer for the risk he/she has taken on in accepting the legal obligation/s that the option imposes on him/her). The possibility that the option will expire prior to being exercised serves as a financil “driver” to encourage the writer to enter into contract.

Therefore, the holder and the writer makes a “bet” effectively, the holder, hoping that the conditions of the market will change to his advantage for him to exercise the option, while the writer hopes that this will not happen.

While the option is “live” (i.e. the holder has a “long position” and the writer has a “short position” once the contract has been entered into, before it has been exercised or has expired.

So how do options work?

There are two main types (depending on whether the option confers the right to buy or sell an underlying asset), namely “put” and “call” options.

“Put Options”

This is where the writer grants the holder the right to sell the underlying asset at the strike price before the option’s expiration date.

“Call Options”

There is where the writer grants the holder the right to buy the underlying asset at the strike price before the option’s expiration date.

Various property can be the subject of an option, including securities, currencies, derivatives, indices and commodities. In a put option, the moment the contract is exercised, it is the writer’s obligation to fulfill the terms of the contract. (In the case where such property cannot be delivered (e.g. an index), cash is often used to settle the contract.

Stock options” relate to the shares of a specific company. In call option, the writer needs to buy the underlying asset for the strike price. A “contract multiplier” is often used to describe the asset in question – it is the multiple of the amount of the asset (which is the subject of the option) that the writer has to deliver to the holder in the event that the option is exercised (e.g. groups of 100 shares.)

As above, all options have an “expiration date”, that is, a date after which they cannot be exercised. On the other hand, “European-style options” and “American-style options differs in a way as such, European style can only be traded on its expiration date, while the American style can be exercised anytime within the start of the contract to its expiration date. Most options used in the U.S. are American-style.

Exchange traded options or ETO and over-the -counter options or OTC are among the main types of options. ETOs can be traded on public exchanges and it has a standard form of contract, while OTC are bespoke and are traded between private parties usually involving large institutions.

These are just some basic information one needs to understand to learn options trading. It is also imperative that a potential trader should grasp the advantages and disadvantages of various option types in seeking to formulate effective trading strategies.

Get more information and tips on options trading and grab some free ebooks and training by visiting my blog at http://www.savvyfinancialtraders.com


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    1 Comment »

    This is a great post, I stumbled across your story while looking for free downloads. Thanks for sharing, I’ll be sure to recommend this site to others.

    April 1st, 2010 | 2:54 pm
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