Options and Derivatives – Calls, Puts, and Basic Strategies

Lachlan Stewart

Lachlan, a former analyst with a global investment bank, now focuses on dissecting emerging market trends. He frequently shares insights on sustainable finance practices and the evolving role of technology in wealth management.

Definition and Core Concept

This article defines Options as financial contracts giving the buyer the right (but not obligation) to buy or sell an underlying asset (stock, index, commodity) at a specified price (strike price) on or before a specific date (expiration). Calls give the right to buy; puts give the right to sell. Options are derivatives because their value derives from an underlying asset. Core features: (1) premium (price paid for option), (2) strike price, (3) expiration date, (4) contract multiplier (typically 100 shares per contract). The article addresses: objectives of options trading; key concepts including in-the-money, at-the-money, out-of-the-money, and intrinsic vs time value; core mechanisms such as covered calls, protective puts, and basic spreads; international comparisons and debated issues (leverage risk, complexity, options on ETFs); summary and emerging trends (weekly options, index options, retail options trading growth); and a Q&A section.

1. Specific Aims of This Article

This article describes options and derivatives without endorsing specific strategies. Objectives commonly cited: hedging existing positions, generating income (selling options), speculating on price direction with limited risk (buying options).

2. Foundational Conceptual Explanations

Key terminology:

  • Call option (long call): Right to buy at strike price. Profits if price rises above strike plus premium paid.
  • Put option (long put): Right to sell at strike price. Profits if price falls below strike minus premium.
  • In-the-money (ITM): Call if underlying price > strike; put if underlying < strike.
  • Out-of-the-money (OTM): Opposite of ITM.
  • Time value (extrinsic value): Premium portion from time remaining and volatility. Decays as expiration approaches (theta).

Basic call example:

  • Stock at 100,buy100,buy110 call for 2premium.Stockrisesto2premium.Stockrisesto115. Exercise: buy at 110,sellat110,sellat115, profit 5−5−2 = 3pershare(3pershare(300 per contract).

3. Core Mechanisms and In-Depth Elaboration

Seller (writer) of options:

  • Collects premium, obligated to deliver if buyer exercises.
  • Covered call: own stock, sell call (income generation).
  • Nakeds call: sell call without owning stock (unlimited loss risk).

Basic strategies:


StrategyActionRiskRewardBest for
Long callBuy callLimited (premium)UnlimitedBullish
Long putBuy putLimited (premium)Limited (strike - premium)Bearish
Covered callOwn stock, sell callStock downsidePremium + capped upsideNeutral/bullish, income
Protective putOwn stock, buy putPremiumUnlimited upsideDownside protection

Spreads (combining options):

  • Vertical spread (buy one strike, sell another same expiration). Limits risk and reward.

4. International Comparisons and Debated Issues

Options exchanges:

  • US: CBOE, NYSE Arca, Nasdaq PHLX.
  • Europe: Eurex, Euronext.
  • Asia: Hong Kong Exchange, Singapore Exchange, NSE (India).

Debated issues:

  1. Leverage risk: Options allow controlling large position with small premium. Losses can be 100% of premium (buyers); sellers of nakeds calls face unlimited loss.
  2. Complexity: Requires understanding of Greeks (delta, gamma, theta, vega). Many retail traders lose money.
  3. Short expiration (weekly options, 0DTE): Higher volatility, rapid time decay. Significant risk for inexperienced traders.

5. Summary and Future Trajectories

Summary: Options provide leverage, hedging, and income generation. Long calls/puts have limited risk (premium). Covered calls and protective puts are lower-risk strategies. Selling nakeds options carries substantial risk. Options are complex instruments.

Emerging trends:

  • 0DTE (zero days to expiration) options – massive volume growth (2023-2025).
  • Index options (SPX, NDX, RUT) – cash-settled, tax-advantaged.
  • Retail options trading expansion via commission-free brokers.

6. Question-and-Answer Session

Q1: Can I lose more than my investment buying options?
A: No. As a buyer, maximum loss is the premium paid. As an uncovered seller, losses can exceed premium (unlimited for nakeds calls, large for nakeds puts if price falls to zero).

Q2: What is a covered call and why use it?
A: Own 100 shares, sell one call option. Collects premium. If price rises above strike, shares called away (sell at strike). Limits upside but generates income. Suitable for moderately bullish, neutral, or slightly bearish outlook.

Q3: Do options expire worthless often?
A: Most (60-80%) out-of-the-money options expire worthless. Writers profit from premium; buyers lose premium. Time decay accelerates in final weeks.

https://www.cboe.com/options/
https://www.investopedia.com/options-4427711
https://www.optionseducation.org

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