Galt Stock Research What is Holding You Down?

Stock Market Newsletter for Self Manage Stock Traders
 Home  News Feeds  Editor  MarketToday Archive  Contact Us  Privacy  Diversions  Investor Resources  Investor Glossary  Legal  Log In  FAQ's

 

 

MarketToday

  Print This Page

  Add To Favorites



Call Option Basics
Research for Online Investors

by John Dalt

1/14/10

What does it mean to “buy a call”? Call options are the right to control a stock at a certain price for a predetermined amount of time. Call options are quoted in price per share, but one option contract is for 100 shares of the underlying stock. The price of one contract is 100 times the quoted price.

A call option is a contract to buy a stock at an exact price within a specific time period.  If a trader believes stock XYZ is going to increase in price, he can buy a call option for much less than the cost of the stock.  He enjoys any increase in stock price as the option will increase in price as the stock goes up.  If the stock price declines, the option can only decrease in price to $0.00 thus limiting the losses of the holder of the option to the purchase price of the option.

Let’s look at an example:
Present stock prices and amount committed:

XYZ stock priced at:    $50.00  x 100 shares = $5,000.00

XYZ March $50 call:     $ 3.00  x  100               = $ 300.00

Third Friday in March price:

XYZ stock priced at:   $55.00 x  100               =$5,500.00

XYZ March $50 call:    $  5.00  x  100              =$   500.00

In this instance, our trade made 10% on invested capital if we bought the stock, but made a 67% return on invested capital on the option contract. Now let’s look at the results if the stock did not perform as expected.

Present stock prices and amount committed:
XYZ stock priced at:    $50.00  x 100 shares = $5,000.00

XYZ March $50 call:     $ 3.00  x  100               = $ 300.00

Third Friday in March price:

XYZ stock priced at:    $45.00 x  100               =$4,500.00

XYZ March $50 call:    $  5.00  x  100              =$        0.00

In this example the XYZ stock lost $5 in price during the holding period.  Our trade returned $4500 for a loss of $500, a 10% loss of capital.  Our option expired worthless, but we only lost $300 on the trade rather than $500

This trade demonstrates three advantages of options:

  1. If you are right in predicting the movement of the underlying stock, you will capitalize on most of the movement higher.
  2. If you are wrong and the underlying stock moves against you, losses may be smaller than if you owned the stock itself.
  3. Returns on invested capital can be much higher on option contracts with small moves in the underlying stock.

What is the largest disadvantage to options; time.  You own a contract to purchase that is limited by time, and time decay can eat into your profits quickly.  In the example above, our trader paid $3 ‘rent’ or time premium to control the underlying stock.  If XYZ ended the time period at $52 dollars you would make back $2.00 for a loss of one dollar per share.  It doesn’t matter if the stock goes to $55 per share a week after the option expires.  You can be right in your prediction, but wrong in time frame and lose money.  If you owned the stock outright, you could sell for the $52 per share and make a smaller profit or chose to wait longer for the higher target price.

Puts and calls may not be bought, or sold, in IRA or 401K accounts.  The exception being covered calls, such as in our Buy, Sell, Hold Service.  You must sign an option addendum with your online brokerage company to sell and buy options.

To buy a call option we enter the option symbol, it is generally made up of five letters.  You may have to enter a (.) period in front of the symbol.  Enter the quantity of contracts you want to purchase, remember each contract is for 100 shares.  Option contracts trade with a Bid and Ask price, we highly recommend using limit orders on option contracts as the ‘spread’ is usually wider on options than on stocks.  We use the ‘Buy to Open’ to place the order.  This refers to ‘Opening’ the contract.  If we chose to sell the option contract before it expires, we would ‘Sell to Close’ to close the contract.

We have talked about buying call option contracts; you can also sell call options.  Using the XYZ company trading at $50, if we did not believe it would increase to $55 before the option expiration date, we could sell to open the $55 call for $3.00 per share.  If it stays under $55 through option expiration day we get to keep the $3.00 premium.  If XYZ goes over $55 per share we would have to buy the stock at the higher market price and sell it for $55 to the option owner, incurring a loss.  This is not a trade you want to enter lightly, it can be dangerous.  Thus it is called selling a “naked” call.  The graphic description depicts you do not own the underlying security and can lose your shorts!

Next week we will write about ‘Puts’.  I hope this has been helpful to you.  If you have experience in options, it may seem elementary, but remember the first option you bought.  We all have to start somewhere.  I encourage you to start by buying one contract, and monitoring your trade for experience.  Experience is the very best teacher, and will help you understand the concepts better.  There are wonderful resources available on options; we may write a more advanced article in the future.

To the mailbag, about the Fed:
So what happens?  Can/will the Fed and Treasury just hide all this debt? Can they get away with this?  Will the USA, over time, become like Zimbabwe? ---subscriber T.M.

T.M  You are making this too easy for me. Answers are:
Nothing
Yes
Yes
Yes!

John Dalt

The information presented in this newsletter is based on generally available news releases, corporate filings, current events, interviews and the editor’s opinions.  It may contain errors and you should not make investment decisions based solely on what you believe you have read here.  Do your own research, it is your money.  If you lose it, it is your responsibility, not ours or your grandmothers!  The editor may or may not have a position in any securities discussed.  The editor may have held a position in a security earlier, or in the future.

MarketToday Home Page

Back to Top

Premium Services:
-------------------------------------
Long Term Portfolio
Safe Long Term Gains
-------------------------------------
Buy, Sell, Hold Portfolio
Long Term Value, Short term Income
--------------------------------------
SwingTrader
Service

Hedgefund Like Gains. Safe profits in Stocks and ETF's. 82% winners
154 Winners out of 188 Closed Trades
-------------------------------------
Past Results 
All Premium Services
-------------------------------------

MarketToday Archive
IMF or Chinese Gold?
Crude Oil & NG Inventories
Iceland Says NO!
Mexican Oil Production
We Have Seen The Enemy
Reconciliation Mechanics
Greek Bond Sale
Bond Auction Basics
All That Glitters
Buffett's Annual Letter
Bond Vigilantes
Health Care Summit
Gold or Bonds?
Health Care Safety Net
Natural Gas Burn
Discount Rate Jitters
Pair Trade Example
Toyota's Woes
Greek Tragedy
Orderly Chaos
Greek Contagion
China, Raising the Ante
Cap & Trade, Dead?
Sovereign Debt Blues
Market Taken to the Woodshed
Researching Companies
Gasoline Too Cheap?
We Have Tried Spending Money...
New Budget, Death Spiral
January 2010 MarketToday
2009 MarketToday Archive
2008 Market Today

---------------------

Galt Stock
Produced by:
Freedom Development, Inc.
1377 N. Clearwater Rd.
Clearwater, KS 67026