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A person owning a call option that has an
expiration 2 months from purchase month, only has that amount of
time to close the position – hopefully at a profit. If the position
is left open until the expiration date, the call option will expire
worthless. The maximum loss for an owner of a call option is the
premium paid.
Profit Potential
Since the profit on a call option is based on the
increase of the underlying stock, the profit potential is unlimited.
The holder has the right to buy the stock at a set price (strike
price), so if the market on the stock is 10 points higher than your
strike price when you exercise the contract, you can make that 10
points – minus your premium paid. If the market is 30 points higher,
you can make 30 points, less you strike price and so on. There is no
ceiling to profit.
Hedging and Protection
Call options can be used as protection for
existing positions. If you have sold a stock short, a long call
option can be used to protect this position. The short sale must be
covered, hopefully at a lower price than the short sale itself –
that is how you make money on short sales. The loss potential when
you sell stock short is unlimited (if the position is not
protected). The stock could rise to an unlimited amount, and you may
be forced to buy back the stock at an inflated price, thus resulting
in a loss. A call option allows the investor to buy back the stock
at a fixed strike price. Having a call option against your short
protects you. The negative aspect to this is that the premium paid
for the option will hurt your overall profit on the short sale.
Short Call Options
Some investors “Sell Calls” or “Short Calls”. The
purpose is here is for the option itself to expire. People who short
call options collect the premium (vs. the buyers who pay the
premium), so if the option expires – the seller will gain that
money. The risk with these are enormous, if the option is not
covered (you own the underlying stock). If the option is left
uncovered or “naked”, the seller can sustain and unlimited loss. The
seller or “writer” of call options is obligated to deliver the stock
to the call holder at the strike price, if the option is exercised.
If the write does not own the stock to perform this obligation, he
must go and get it at the market. If the market is significantly
higher than the strike price, he can lose that difference.
Covered Calls
The more conservative way to engage in call
shorting, is to do them with existing long stock positions. If a
person owns shares at a price, he or she can short a call option the
same stock. Doing this allows the person to make the premium, thus
lowering his cost. It also covers the option itself, so if the
option is exercised – the investor can deliver his own stock and not
have to buy a new 100 shares from the market.
Only seasoned investors should engage in options
trading. Talk to your broker or advisor to see if they are right for
you. “Baby Steps” are the key in the beginning, but once you know
your way around, you can put yourself in very profitable situations.
Learn more at
www.brokerjobs.com/calloption.htm
Good Luck!
Nick Hunter is the President of American
Investment Training (AIT)
http://www.aitraining.com/
- AIT offers securities training and licensing to the
brokerage industry. |