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Basic Concepts

Put Options - Page .. 1 .. 2

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Example: Jane opens a small travel business that specializes in island vacations. The manager of a a local business agrees to purchase 100 trips to Hawaii in January for $300 round-trip as perks for his employees. Jane's computed total cost of each trip is $200-a $100 profit on each trip which locks in a guaranteed profit of $10,000 for her initial period of operation. In effect, the guaranteed order is a put option.

Scenario 1: As luck would have it, just as November rolls around, a competitor offers the same trip for only $250. If Jane didn't have a put option agreement, she would have to drop her price to meet the competition's price, and thereby lose a significant amount of profit. Luckily, she exercises her right to sell the trips to Hawaii for $300 each and enjoys a healthy profit in the new year. Jane's put option was in-the-money in comparison to the price of her competitor.

Scenario 2: Jane gets a call from another client who needs to set up 100 trips in January to fulfill obligations to his management team and is willing to pay up to $400 per trip. Since Jane is under no obligation to sell the trips to her first customer, she agrees to sell them for the higher market price and makes a total profit of $20,000 on the deal.


Put Option Review

  1. Put options give traders the right, but not the obligation, to sell the underlying stock at the strike price until their broker’s cut-off time shortly after market close on the last trading day before expiration. A put option is in-the-money (ITM) if its strike price is above the current price of the underlying stock. A put option is out-of-the-money (OTM) if its strike price is below the current price of the underlying stock. A put option is at-the-money (ATM) if its strike price is the same as (or close to) the current price of the underlying stock.
  2. Buying Puts (long-bearish). The trader believes the market will fall and buys (go long) puts. When the put is purchased, it is called an opening transaction. Now, the buyer has rights. A put buyer has the right, but not the obligation, to sell the underlying stock at the strike price of the option until the expiration date. Furthermore, if a trader buys a put option, the risk of the trade equals the money paid for the option, or the debit. The profit is approximately equal to the fall in the price of the underlying asset. The potential profit is limited, but high, because the underlying asset cannot fall below zero. Finally, to offset a long put, the trader will sell a put with the same terms (strike price and expiration) to "close" out the position. On the other hand, if the trader exercises a long put, then he or she is selling, or short, the underlying stock or index at the strike price of the put option.
  3. Selling Puts (short-bullish). The trader believes the market will rise and sells (goes short) puts. Sellers have obligations. A put seller has the obligation to buy the underlying stock (usually 100 shares per option) at the put strike price. In other words, the option seller must be ready to have the stock "put" to him or her. The put seller's risk is the drop in the stock price, which is limited to the stock falling to zero. The profit equals the credit received from the sale of the put. Put sellers often prefer options with little time left until expiration because they want a put to expire worthless. In that way, the seller keeps the entire premium. A short put is offset by purchasing a put with the same strike price and expiration to close out the position.

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