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Add You - Option Trading Basics
An Introduction To ATMs t will, the intrinsic value of these same options at that point will be $5.00 ($27.50 - $22.50). That means that if the Stock gets to $27.50 a share, our option premium would be at least $5.00 plus a small amount of time value, depending on the remaining time until expiry.The invention of the Automated Teller Machines or ATMs have made banking more convenient as people would not have to go inside the bank and wait for tellers to help them. In addition to this, people can also access these ATMs all day long and they are located in various locations such as the mall or parks, which saves time since people would not have to go to the bank in case they run out of cash. However, using these machines has some risks. People who use them are not given the same security they would usually get when they are inside a bank. Fortunately, there are some steps people can take, which can give them a certain level of security as they withdraw their hard-earned money. Below are some of these security measures.TimingMost ATM robberies occur at night, because robbers take advantage of the darkness to hide or to not be recognized, so as much as possible, you should make your withdrawal during the daytime. However, if you have no choice, you should look for an ATM machine in a well-lighted and high-traffic area and it would also be a good idea to bring someone along when you when you withdraw during night time."Strangers"When using the machine, you should also be able to scan the area for suspicious looking persons, and if you see one lurking around, it would be better to move along and find another machine. If you ca Ten option contracts will cost us $2,800 ($280 times 100) and if MSFT goes to $27,500, we could sell our option contracts for at least $5,000 ($500 by 10 contracts), maybe more. We will have $2,800 at risk if we take this position, rather than the full price of the Stock ($24,500) for a potential of 80% or $2,200 profit, plus whatever time value is left in the option, probably another $100. Our options buying strategy gave us a much larger percentage profit with a much smaller potential risk. Don't forget though that, for us as the buyer, these options will expire worthless if not sold or exercised by the expiry date. The option seller or writer simply has to sit back and wait until expiry to see if he is going to be exercised. If the Stock price is below the strike price at expiry, he keeps the premium and can write another option over the same Stock. If the Stock price is above the strike price, he will most likely be exercised and will have to sell his Shares if he doesn't exit the position by buying his options back on the open market (quite often at a higher price than he originally sold them for). The downside of buying the option over the physical Stock is that if you bought the Stock itself, even if the price had not moved, you would still own it, but by buying the option, if the price doesn't move in the desired direction, you lose part of your trading capital. To make options tradi Seven Tips to Bring You and Your Staff to Their Full Potential Options trading can increase the profits you make when trading Stocks if you understand how to use them and know what you are doing. Options can be a very useful tool that the average investor can use to enhance their returns.Possibly, the greatest untapped resource in any organization lies in its employees. These days, “giving 100 percent” is not enough to get ahead; you need to become more effective in unlocking your staff’s potential strengths, creativity, and resourcefulness. The best companies have the best people, and the top people are those who think and act faster and better than others. According to Gallup Research, organizations make use of less than 20% of their employee’s potential.The following seven tips are what I believe are the specific ingredients in bringing the leader and his or her staff to their full potential:1. Leadership – Being an effective leader helps you and your staff as they look to you for all of the specifics in getting their work done, as with items that follow and more. Allow your staff to think on their own, have trust in them for accomplishing the tasks assigned to them, and in return you will find that managing your employees will help them perform at their optimum level. The job of the leader is to help increase their staff’s effectiveness and to recognize and work to improve whatever limitations affect individual’s performance.2. Communication – As a leader, talk to your staff and share with them how best to get the task or project done. In doing so, use optimism to motivate and inspire your staff and most importantl This article - Options Trading Basics, looks at what options are and discusses some of the options trading strategies traders can use with these versatile instruments. Options - An Overview Options give the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy (a call option) or sell (a put option) the underlying Stock or futures contract at a specified price up until a specified date. In other words, options are like tradable insurance contracts. An investor can purchase a Put option as insurance against a decline in the Stock price or a Call option in case the Stock rises. Buying an option gives the purchaser time to decide whether they will buy or sell the underlying Stock. The price is locked in until the expiry date, which in the case of LEAPS can be years into the future. Options trading has several advantages that every Stock Market investor should be aware of, such as high leverage, lower overall risk than owning the physical security, more versatility and the ability to generate extra income from a current Stock portfolio. An option's value fluctuates in direct relationship to the underlying security. The price of the option is only a fraction of the price of the security and therefore provides high leverage and lower risk - the most an option buyer can lose is the premium, or deposit, they paid on entering into the contract. By purchasing the underlying Stock of Futures contract itself, a much larger loss is possible if the price moves against the buyers position. An option is described by its symbol, whether it’s a put or a call, an expiration month and a strike price. A Call option is a bullish contract, giving the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy the underlying security at a certain price on or before a certain date. A Put option is a bearish contract, giving the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to sell the underlying security at a certain price on or before a certain date. The expiration month is the month the option contract expires. The strike price is the price that the buyer can either buy call) or sell (put) the underlying security by the expiration date. The premium is the price that is paid for the option. The intrinsic value is the difference between the current price of the underlying security and the strike price of the option. The time value is the difference between current premium of the option and the intrinsic value. The time value is also influenced by the volatility of the underlying security. Up to 90% of all out of the money options expire worthless and their time value gradually declines until their expiry date. This clue offers traders a very good hint as to which side of an options contract they should be on...professional options traders who make consistent profits usually sell far more options than they buy. The option contracts that they do buy are usually only to hedge their physical Stock Portfolios - that this is a powerful distinction between the punters and small traders who consistently buy low priced, out of the money and close to expiry puts and calls, hoping for a big payoff (unlikely) and the guys who really make the money out of the options market every month, by consistently selling these options to them - please think about this as you read the remainder of this article. The seller of the option contract is obligated to satisfy the contract if the buyer decides to exercise the option. Therefore, if he has sold Covered Call options over his Shares, and the Stock price is above the option strike price at expiry, the option is said to be in-the-money, and the seller must sell his shares to the option buyer at the strike price if he is exercised. Sometimes an in-the-money option will not be exercised, but it is very rare. The option seller (or writer) has to be prepared to sell the Stock at the strike price if exercised. He can always buy back the option prior to expiry if he chooses to and write one at a higher strike price if the Stock price has rallied, but this results in a capital loss as he will usually have to pay more to buy the option back than the premium he received when he originally sold it. Many option writers simply get exercised out of the Stock and then immediately re-buy more of the same or another Stock and simply write more call options against them. The buyer of an option has no obligations at all - he either sells his option later at a profit or a loss, or exercises it if the Stock price is in-the-money at expiry and he can make a profit. The vast majority of options are held until expiry and simply decay in price until there is no point in the hapless buyer selling them. Very few options are actually exercised by the buyer. The vast majority expire worthless. Having said all this, lets look at an example of how to use options to gain leverage to a Stock price movement when the trend does go in our favour... For this example we will use MSFT as the underlying security. Let's assume MSFT is trading for $24.50 a share and it is early January. We are bullish on this Stock and based on our technical analysis we think that it will go to $27.50 within two months. In this example, we will ignore Brokerage costs, but they do have an effect on the percentage returns. The prices and price moves of the Stock and the options are hypothetical - they are intended as a guide only. Buying 1000 physical shares will cost $24,500 and if we sell our position at $27.50 a share, we will make a profit of $3,000 or a 12% return on our capital. We will have $24,500 at risk if we take this position for a potential of 12% or $3,000 profit. Instead of using cash to buy the physical Stock, we can buy 10 call options with an expiration that is at least three months into the future and a strike price that is close to current price of the underlying security. 10 contracts represents 1000 shares of the stock, a call option is bullish, three months until expiry gives us some time for a quick move, and buying an option with a strike price that is close to the current price of MSFT allows us to get the full potential of the intrinsic value. We buy 10 MSFT $22.50 April Call options. These options are currently selling for $2.80 and they are in the money. $24.50 (the current price of the Stock) minus $22.50 ( the strike price) is $2.00, which is our Intrinsic value. $2.80 (the option premium) minus $2.00 (the Intrinsic value) gives us $0.80, which is the Time value. If the price rallies to $27.50, as we believe it will, the intrinsic value of these same options at that point will be $5.00 ($27.50 - $22.50). That means that if the Stock gets to $27.50 a share, our option premium would be at least $5.00 plus a small amount of time value, depending on the remaining time until expiry. Ten option contracts will cost us $2,800 ($280 times 100) and if MSFT goes to $27,500, we could sell our option contracts for at least $5,000 ($500 by 10 contracts), maybe more. We will have $2,800 at risk if we take this position, rather than the full price of the Stock ($24,500) for a potential of 80% or $2,200 profit, plus whatever time value is left in the option, probably another $100. Our options buying strategy gave us a much larger percentage profit with a much smaller potential risk. Don't forget though that, for us as the buyer, these options will expire worthless if not sold or exercised by the expiry date. The option seller or writer simply has to sit back and wait until expiry to see if he is going to be exercised. If the Stock price is below the strike price at expiry, he keeps the premium and can write another option over the same Stock. If the Stock price is above the strike price, he will most likely be exercised and will have to sell his Shares if he doesn't exit the position by buying his options back on the open market (quite often at a higher price than he originally sold them for). The downside of buying the option over the physical Stock is that if you bought the Stock itself, even if the price had not moved, you would still own it, but by buying the option, if the price doesn't move in the desired direction, you lose part of your trading capital. To make options tradin The Powershares ETF Edge ce moves against the buyers position.While I tend to favor iShares an investment tool because of the wide menu and country specific options they provide investors, I have to say that I am increasingly impressed with the new and fast-growing Powershares family of ETFs and will be adding two of them to portfolios this month. Powershares also address one weakness of iShares which is that they track indexes that market cap weighted.In other words, the weighting of a company in a particular ETF is dependent on the value of its outstanding shares. This means that the bigger companies tend to affect the ETF’s performance much more than the smaller companies. Of course, big doesn’t always mean better. Powershares essentially creates its own indexes based on rules-based quantative analysis that they refer to as “intelligent indexes”.This seems to me to be more useful than blindly following market cap weighted indexes. There are two Powershares that I particularly like at this point. The first is a biotech Powershare (PBE) that contains 30 biotech companies. If its holdings were weighted by market cap, two companies, Amgen and Genentech would account for more than 60% of its holdings.Instead your exposure is spread among 30 different companies with no company accounting for more than 5% of the total. 30% of your exposure is to large cap companies, 26% is to mid-cap companies and 43 An option is described by its symbol, whether it’s a put or a call, an expiration month and a strike price. A Call option is a bullish contract, giving the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy the underlying security at a certain price on or before a certain date. A Put option is a bearish contract, giving the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to sell the underlying security at a certain price on or before a certain date. The expiration month is the month the option contract expires. The strike price is the price that the buyer can either buy call) or sell (put) the underlying security by the expiration date. The premium is the price that is paid for the option. The intrinsic value is the difference between the current price of the underlying security and the strike price of the option. The time value is the difference between current premium of the option and the intrinsic value. The time value is also influenced by the volatility of the underlying security. Up to 90% of all out of the money options expire worthless and their time value gradually declines until their expiry date. This clue offers traders a very good hint as to which side of an options contract they should be on...professional options traders who make consistent profits usually sell far more options than they buy. The option contracts that they do buy are usually only to hedge their physical Stock Portfolios - that this is a powerful distinction between the punters and small traders who consistently buy low priced, out of the money and close to expiry puts and calls, hoping for a big payoff (unlikely) and the guys who really make the money out of the options market every month, by consistently selling these options to them - please think about this as you read the remainder of this article. The seller of the option contract is obligated to satisfy the contract if the buyer decides to exercise the option. Therefore, if he has sold Covered Call options over his Shares, and the Stock price is above the option strike price at expiry, the option is said to be in-the-money, and the seller must sell his shares to the option buyer at the strike price if he is exercised. Sometimes an in-the-money option will not be exercised, but it is very rare. The option seller (or writer) has to be prepared to sell the Stock at the strike price if exercised. He can always buy back the option prior to expiry if he chooses to and write one at a higher strike price if the Stock price has rallied, but this results in a capital loss as he will usually have to pay more to buy the option back than the premium he received when he originally sold it. Many option writers simply get exercised out of the Stock and then immediately re-buy more of the same or another Stock and simply write more call options against them. The buyer of an option has no obligations at all - he either sells his option later at a profit or a loss, or exercises it if the Stock price is in-the-money at expiry and he can make a profit. The vast majority of options are held until expiry and simply decay in price until there is no point in the hapless buyer selling them. Very few options are actually exercised by the buyer. The vast majority expire worthless. Having said all this, lets look at an example of how to use options to gain leverage to a Stock price movement when the trend does go in our favour... For this example we will use MSFT as the underlying security. Let's assume MSFT is trading for $24.50 a share and it is early January. We are bullish on this Stock and based on our technical analysis we think that it will go to $27.50 within two months. In this example, we will ignore Brokerage costs, but they do have an effect on the percentage returns. The prices and price moves of the Stock and the options are hypothetical - they are intended as a guide only. Buying 1000 physical shares will cost $24,500 and if we sell our position at $27.50 a share, we will make a profit of $3,000 or a 12% return on our capital. We will have $24,500 at risk if we take this position for a potential of 12% or $3,000 profit. Instead of using cash to buy the physical Stock, we can buy 10 call options with an expiration that is at least three months into the future and a strike price that is close to current price of the underlying security. 10 contracts represents 1000 shares of the stock, a call option is bullish, three months until expiry gives us some time for a quick move, and buying an option with a strike price that is close to the current price of MSFT allows us to get the full potential of the intrinsic value. We buy 10 MSFT $22.50 April Call options. These options are currently selling for $2.80 and they are in the money. $24.50 (the current price of the Stock) minus $22.50 ( the strike price) is $2.00, which is our Intrinsic value. $2.80 (the option premium) minus $2.00 (the Intrinsic value) gives us $0.80, which is the Time value. If the price rallies to $27.50, as we believe it will, the intrinsic value of these same options at that point will be $5.00 ($27.50 - $22.50). That means that if the Stock gets to $27.50 a share, our option premium would be at least $5.00 plus a small amount of time value, depending on the remaining time until expiry. Ten option contracts will cost us $2,800 ($280 times 100) and if MSFT goes to $27,500, we could sell our option contracts for at least $5,000 ($500 by 10 contracts), maybe more. We will have $2,800 at risk if we take this position, rather than the full price of the Stock ($24,500) for a potential of 80% or $2,200 profit, plus whatever time value is left in the option, probably another $100. Our options buying strategy gave us a much larger percentage profit with a much smaller potential risk. Don't forget though that, for us as the buyer, these options will expire worthless if not sold or exercised by the expiry date. The option seller or writer simply has to sit back and wait until expiry to see if he is going to be exercised. If the Stock price is below the strike price at expiry, he keeps the premium and can write another option over the same Stock. If the Stock price is above the strike price, he will most likely be exercised and will have to sell his Shares if he doesn't exit the position by buying his options back on the open market (quite often at a higher price than he originally sold them for). The downside of buying the option over the physical Stock is that if you bought the Stock itself, even if the price had not moved, you would still own it, but by buying the option, if the price doesn't move in the desired direction, you lose part of your trading capital. To make options tradi Managers: Got the Right PR? who really make the money out of the options market every month, by consistently selling these options to them - please think about this as you read the remainder of this article.As a business, non-profit, government agency or association manager, are you satisfied with using a collection of communications tactics to move a message from one point to another. You know, creating print and broadcast exposures? Publicity, if you will?No problem, if that’s all you believe you really need.But, have you ever thought about pulling out all the PR stops to help achieve your unit’s managerial objectives?I mean, you COULD do something really significant about those important outside audience behaviors that MOST affect the department, group, division or subsidiary unit you manage. Then take advantage of the perception levels you’ve achieved as those key external audiences of yours become persuaded to your managerial way of thinking.And, for that matter, once you’ve persuaded a number of members of that key external audience to your views on the issue in question, watch their perceptions closely as they morph into behavioral actions that allow your unit to succeed.That might even make your day! And it’s all very doable.But not if you insist on limiting your offensive public relations effort to simply creating print and broadcast exposures. Instead, you should be preparing to do something positive about the behaviors of the very outside audiences of yours that MOST affect yo The seller of the option contract is obligated to satisfy the contract if the buyer decides to exercise the option. Therefore, if he has sold Covered Call options over his Shares, and the Stock price is above the option strike price at expiry, the option is said to be in-the-money, and the seller must sell his shares to the option buyer at the strike price if he is exercised. Sometimes an in-the-money option will not be exercised, but it is very rare. The option seller (or writer) has to be prepared to sell the Stock at the strike price if exercised. He can always buy back the option prior to expiry if he chooses to and write one at a higher strike price if the Stock price has rallied, but this results in a capital loss as he will usually have to pay more to buy the option back than the premium he received when he originally sold it. Many option writers simply get exercised out of the Stock and then immediately re-buy more of the same or another Stock and simply write more call options against them. The buyer of an option has no obligations at all - he either sells his option later at a profit or a loss, or exercises it if the Stock price is in-the-money at expiry and he can make a profit. The vast majority of options are held until expiry and simply decay in price until there is no point in the hapless buyer selling them. Very few options are actually exercised by the buyer. The vast majority expire worthless. Having said all this, lets look at an example of how to use options to gain leverage to a Stock price movement when the trend does go in our favour... For this example we will use MSFT as the underlying security. Let's assume MSFT is trading for $24.50 a share and it is early January. We are bullish on this Stock and based on our technical analysis we think that it will go to $27.50 within two months. In this example, we will ignore Brokerage costs, but they do have an effect on the percentage returns. The prices and price moves of the Stock and the options are hypothetical - they are intended as a guide only. Buying 1000 physical shares will cost $24,500 and if we sell our position at $27.50 a share, we will make a profit of $3,000 or a 12% return on our capital. We will have $24,500 at risk if we take this position for a potential of 12% or $3,000 profit. Instead of using cash to buy the physical Stock, we can buy 10 call options with an expiration that is at least three months into the future and a strike price that is close to current price of the underlying security. 10 contracts represents 1000 shares of the stock, a call option is bullish, three months until expiry gives us some time for a quick move, and buying an option with a strike price that is close to the current price of MSFT allows us to get the full potential of the intrinsic value. We buy 10 MSFT $22.50 April Call options. These options are currently selling for $2.80 and they are in the money. $24.50 (the current price of the Stock) minus $22.50 ( the strike price) is $2.00, which is our Intrinsic value. $2.80 (the option premium) minus $2.00 (the Intrinsic value) gives us $0.80, which is the Time value. If the price rallies to $27.50, as we believe it will, the intrinsic value of these same options at that point will be $5.00 ($27.50 - $22.50). That means that if the Stock gets to $27.50 a share, our option premium would be at least $5.00 plus a small amount of time value, depending on the remaining time until expiry. Ten option contracts will cost us $2,800 ($280 times 100) and if MSFT goes to $27,500, we could sell our option contracts for at least $5,000 ($500 by 10 contracts), maybe more. We will have $2,800 at risk if we take this position, rather than the full price of the Stock ($24,500) for a potential of 80% or $2,200 profit, plus whatever time value is left in the option, probably another $100. Our options buying strategy gave us a much larger percentage profit with a much smaller potential risk. Don't forget though that, for us as the buyer, these options will expire worthless if not sold or exercised by the expiry date. The option seller or writer simply has to sit back and wait until expiry to see if he is going to be exercised. If the Stock price is below the strike price at expiry, he keeps the premium and can write another option over the same Stock. If the Stock price is above the strike price, he will most likely be exercised and will have to sell his Shares if he doesn't exit the position by buying his options back on the open market (quite often at a higher price than he originally sold them for). The downside of buying the option over the physical Stock is that if you bought the Stock itself, even if the price had not moved, you would still own it, but by buying the option, if the price doesn't move in the desired direction, you lose part of your trading capital. To make options tradi VooDoo Training For the Stock Market to gain leverage to a Stock price movement when the trend does go in our favour...If you go to Haiti or other places in the Caribbean you may run into the Voodoo tradition of magic. There are long and mostly noisy rituals with the medicine man spouting words that bring great power and conjure up whatever it is the supplicant desires. Great amounts of smoke and mirrors.Does this remind you of anything?I hear the mesmerizing words of my broker telling me about a wonderful stock. He produces multicolored charts and graphs that dazzle my eyes. His chanting is “BUY, BUY, BUY”. I can’t resist. He has me under his spell. Thus the magic of Wall Street. Great amounts of smoke and mirrors.Brokerage houses and mutual funds only want you to do one thing – BUY and HOLD. Never sell.To escape the hold of these magicians you must start to think for yourself. I am sure you realize that for the past 3 years you have been losing money. The recent rally has returned some of your losses and Maul Street wants you to hang in there as the rest of your money will be returning. Maybe. If the broker (magician) keeps doing what he has been doing you are going to get more of the same results. If you have lost 30 to 50% of your savings during the past 3 years don’t you think you could do as well without the “help” of a broker or financial planner?OK. No more glossy colored folders (smoke and mirrors) about how wonderful a company For this example we will use MSFT as the underlying security. Let's assume MSFT is trading for $24.50 a share and it is early January. We are bullish on this Stock and based on our technical analysis we think that it will go to $27.50 within two months. In this example, we will ignore Brokerage costs, but they do have an effect on the percentage returns. The prices and price moves of the Stock and the options are hypothetical - they are intended as a guide only. Buying 1000 physical shares will cost $24,500 and if we sell our position at $27.50 a share, we will make a profit of $3,000 or a 12% return on our capital. We will have $24,500 at risk if we take this position for a potential of 12% or $3,000 profit. Instead of using cash to buy the physical Stock, we can buy 10 call options with an expiration that is at least three months into the future and a strike price that is close to current price of the underlying security. 10 contracts represents 1000 shares of the stock, a call option is bullish, three months until expiry gives us some time for a quick move, and buying an option with a strike price that is close to the current price of MSFT allows us to get the full potential of the intrinsic value. We buy 10 MSFT $22.50 April Call options. These options are currently selling for $2.80 and they are in the money. $24.50 (the current price of the Stock) minus $22.50 ( the strike price) is $2.00, which is our Intrinsic value. $2.80 (the option premium) minus $2.00 (the Intrinsic value) gives us $0.80, which is the Time value. If the price rallies to $27.50, as we believe it will, the intrinsic value of these same options at that point will be $5.00 ($27.50 - $22.50). That means that if the Stock gets to $27.50 a share, our option premium would be at least $5.00 plus a small amount of time value, depending on the remaining time until expiry. Ten option contracts will cost us $2,800 ($280 times 100) and if MSFT goes to $27,500, we could sell our option contracts for at least $5,000 ($500 by 10 contracts), maybe more. We will have $2,800 at risk if we take this position, rather than the full price of the Stock ($24,500) for a potential of 80% or $2,200 profit, plus whatever time value is left in the option, probably another $100. Our options buying strategy gave us a much larger percentage profit with a much smaller potential risk. Don't forget though that, for us as the buyer, these options will expire worthless if not sold or exercised by the expiry date. The option seller or writer simply has to sit back and wait until expiry to see if he is going to be exercised. If the Stock price is below the strike price at expiry, he keeps the premium and can write another option over the same Stock. If the Stock price is above the strike price, he will most likely be exercised and will have to sell his Shares if he doesn't exit the position by buying his options back on the open market (quite often at a higher price than he originally sold them for). The downside of buying the option over the physical Stock is that if you bought the Stock itself, even if the price had not moved, you would still own it, but by buying the option, if the price doesn't move in the desired direction, you lose part of your trading capital. To make options tradi The Reporting Problem Can Cost You 10% of Total Revenue t will, the intrinsic value of these same options at that point will be $5.00 ($27.50 - $22.50). That means that if the Stock gets to $27.50 a share, our option premium would be at least $5.00 plus a small amount of time value, depending on the remaining time until expiry.What Causes the Reporting Problem? Busy productive people engaged in the fieldBest performersManagement and even Executives In fact, anyone and everyone in an enterprise can contribute to the Reporting Problem, particularly if left to their own devices. And the cascading negative effect of faulty, late, and missing information will cost a fortune to reconcile, for some companies, millions of dollars each year.In many businesses the Reporting Problem is caused by an absence of effective discipline. The solution is to mandate that late and inaccurate reporting is unacceptable and will not be tolerated.Although necessary in certain instances, cleansing data is a reactive process and, as such, part of the enormous cost burden of poor initial reporting. This cost can be minimized, or eliminated, if at the point of information origination a modern rules-based information collection process is implemented. Reporting then could flow through a logical easy-to-use graphical interface designed to coax diligent compliance:Exact and complete information on assignments, but no more, is planned and presented to each individual employeeReporting of daily assignments is accomplished by an intuitive selection of jobs, sites, tasks and activities matched to actual start and stop Ten option contracts will cost us $2,800 ($280 times 100) and if MSFT goes to $27,500, we could sell our option contracts for at least $5,000 ($500 by 10 contracts), maybe more. We will have $2,800 at risk if we take this position, rather than the full price of the Stock ($24,500) for a potential of 80% or $2,200 profit, plus whatever time value is left in the option, probably another $100. Our options buying strategy gave us a much larger percentage profit with a much smaller potential risk. Don't forget though that, for us as the buyer, these options will expire worthless if not sold or exercised by the expiry date. The option seller or writer simply has to sit back and wait until expiry to see if he is going to be exercised. If the Stock price is below the strike price at expiry, he keeps the premium and can write another option over the same Stock. If the Stock price is above the strike price, he will most likely be exercised and will have to sell his Shares if he doesn't exit the position by buying his options back on the open market (quite often at a higher price than he originally sold them for). The downside of buying the option over the physical Stock is that if you bought the Stock itself, even if the price had not moved, you would still own it, but by buying the option, if the price doesn't move in the desired direction, you lose part of your trading capital. To make options trading work, the underlying security must move fairly quickly in the direction you expect, or you will lose money at an ever increasing rate as the expiry date draws nearer. As you can see, options strategies can offer much higher percentage returns with less risk for the same trade. The majority of your cash is still safely in your trading account rather than being exposed to the market. This is just one example of using options trading to increase your Stock Market returns. There are many more strategies and ways to use options and I encourage you to explore them further. All options expire worthless if they are not in-the-money at expiry, so the buyer must close out or exercise his position on or before the expiration date or he will lose the entire premium. The time value portion of the option premium decreases gradually until expiration date. The closer to expiry, the faster the time value reduces, as there is less time for the option to move in the desired direction for the buyer. For buyers, top traders advise never to hold an option with less than 30 days to expiry due to the exponential rise in time decay during this period. For sellers, it is usually most profitable to write options that have 30 days or less to expiry, due to this same time decay effect...the buyer of these options has the odds stacked against them and will require a large price movement in his desired direction to make a profit - remember, the vast majority of options expire worthless - so this is the side of these instruments the wealthy usually find themselves on - just a thought... There are many other intricacies of options trading that investors and traders should be aware of. This article is only an introduction to options trading and there is a lot more information for you to learn. For a more in-depth look at the various Options strategies available, visit AcornTrader.com. This page has a series of articles on options trading and outlines some of the strategies traders can use to profit from these extremely flexible vehicles. We encourage you to study these instruments carefully if you decide to trade them. Then use the trend trading strategies outlined in these stories and articles to position yourself on the right side of the market - whether as a buyer or a seller. To Your Trading Success,
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