Feb
13
If this is your first time visiting, subscribe to our RSS feed.
Everything thing you ever wanted to know about options trading strategies in today’s stock market, all in one hubpage. Everything for the Novice stock options trader, to the veteran trader from great articles to great resources, come gone the newest trading community, sponsored by Options University, a leader in options trading education.
read more | digg story
Popularity: 66% [?]
Help others find this article at:
del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Google Ma.gnolia Socializer Technorati Windows Live Yahoo!
- Previous post in General:
Advanced Strategies
Nov
2
Advanced Strategies
Filed Under General | Leave a Comment
Recently, (October and November ‘03), the giant biotech Amgen (AMGN) came under some intense pressure, trading down about $12.00 before it found what appeared to be a decent level of support, and began to consolidate. At this level, anyone interested in going long Amgen at a discounted price would be advised to do so. Implied volatility was high coming off this precipitous drop, which caused premiums in the options to increase considerably.
This scenario can be a very attractive for covered call sellers or buy-writers. On Tuesday, December 2, 2003, Amgen was trading at $58.90, the December 60 call was trading at $1.30, and there were only two weeks left until expiration.
Popularity: 30% [?]
Help others find this article at:
del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Google Ma.gnolia Socializer Technorati Windows Live Yahoo!
- Previous post in General:
Advanced Strategies
- Next post in General:
Options Trading Strategies: Basics to Advanced
Nov
1
Advanced Strategies
Filed Under General | Leave a Comment
Great article on some advanced strategies for trading options in the stock market.
read more | digg story
Popularity: 30% [?]
Help others find this article at:
del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Google Ma.gnolia Socializer Technorati Windows Live Yahoo!
- Previous post in General:
Key Point in - The Stock Replacement Covered Call Strategy
- Next post in General:
Advanced Strategies
Nov
1
The fact that you are creating the covered call strategy (buy-write) by doing the vertical spread is very important to note. For margin purposes, the vertical spread will be margined at a much more favorable rate than the traditional buy-write because you do not own the actual stock and therefore do not have as much to lose.
read more | digg story
Popularity: 29% [?]
Help others find this article at:
del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Google Ma.gnolia Socializer Technorati Windows Live Yahoo!
- Previous post in General:
MER Chart – Collar Example #4
- Next post in General:
Advanced Strategies
Oct
29
MER Chart – Collar Example #4
Filed Under General | Leave a Comment
MER stock trading chart
read more | digg story
Popularity: 24% [?]
Help others find this article at:
del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Google Ma.gnolia Socializer Technorati Windows Live Yahoo!
- Previous post in General:
Time Decay
- Next post in General:
Key Point in - The Stock Replacement Covered Call Strategy
Oct
5
Time Decay
Filed Under General | Leave a Comment
Time decay, also known as theta, is defined as the rate by which an option’s value erodes into expiration. The value of the option over parity to the stock is called extrinsic value.
Since an option is a depreciating asset, meaning it has a limited life, the extrinsic value in the option will wither away daily until expiration. This “decay” is not a linear function meaning it is not equally distributed between all of the days to expiration.
As the option gets closer to expiration, the daily rate of decay increases and continues to increase daily until expiration of the option. At expiration, all options in the expiration month, calls and puts, in-the-money and out-of-the-money must be completely devoid of extrinsic value as noted in the time value decay charts below.
As more time goes by, the options extrinsic value decreases. Again, it is important to note that the rate of this decrease is not linear, meaning not smooth and even throughout the life of the option contract. An option contract starts feeling the decay curve increasing when the option has about 45 days to expiration. It increases rapidly again at about 30 days out and really starts losing its value in the last two weeks before expiration.
This is like a boulder rolling down a hill. The further it goes down the hill, the more steam it picks up until the hill ends.
By selling the option and owning the stock, the covered call seller captures the extrinsic value in the option by holding the short call until expiration.
As mentioned earlier, an option’s loss of extrinsic value over its life is called time decay. In the covered call strategy the option’s time decay works to the seller’s advantage in that the more that time goes by, the more the extrinsic value decreases.
Key Point – The covered call strategy provides the investor with another opportunity to gain income from a long stock position. The strategy not only produces gains when the stock trades up, but also provides above average gains in a stagnant period, while offsetting losses when the stock declines in price.
We have now seen how a covered call strategy is constructed and how it is supposed to work. Keep in mind that the trade can be entered into in two ways. You can either sell calls against stock you already own (Covered Call) or you can buy stock and sell calls against them at the same time (Buy Write).
Example 1
You own 1000 shares of Oracle at $9.50.
The stock has been stuck around this level for a long time now and you have grown impatient. You finally give in and sell the front month (November for example) at-the-money calls. The at-the-money calls would have a strike price of $10 if the stock was trading at $9.50.
You sell the calls at a $.50 premium per contract which creates a $10.50 breakeven point. Remember, in a buy-write, the breakeven point is the strike price plus the option premium. Let’s look at what our returns will be in each of the three scenarios.
Popularity: 9% [?]
Help others find this article at:
del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Google Ma.gnolia Socializer Technorati Windows Live Yahoo!
- Previous post in General:
Contact Us
- Next post in General:
MER Chart – Collar Example #4















