May 21, 2013

Options Trading Strategies: Taking the Mystery Out of Puts and Calls


Read the original article at Money Morning

The hardest part of learning about options trading strategies is getting used to the language. Once you nail that, you’re most of the way there.

Here are the terms you are going to need to learn to understand and use options. Keep in mind that the best way to master jargon is by applying it in real situations.
Let’s jump right in by first explaining puts and calls.

These are two of the key fixed ingredients of an option – fixed, meaning they never change. They tell us what the option stands for and what it is worth.

A call is a contract that gives its owner the right to buy 100 shares of stock at a fixed price (known in advance). A put is just the opposite, and completes the transaction. It’s a contract giving its owner the right to sell 100 shares of stock.

These concepts are the keys to exactly what an option is.

An option is a contract granting you as buyer control over 100 shares of stock. This is always the case – one option per 100 shares.

So when you buy a call, one major benefit is that you control 100 shares. This means that:

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Read the original article at Money Morning

Silver Prices: An Option Trading Strategy That Tells You When to Buy


Read the original article at Money Morning

As last week’s Money Morning special report pointed out, the long-term fundamentals for silver prices are decidedly bullish.

However, in today’s volatile market, picking the right time to buy silver is something of a guessing game.

But if you are familiar with options, you can let them be your guide in learning precisely when to buy.

And here’s the best part: This option trading strategy will only cost you a few dollars.

It works with either options on silver futures – e.g., the standard 5,000-ounce Comex contract, recently valued at around $140,000 – or any of the much more affordable silver-based exchange-traded funds (ETFs) on which options trade.

Taking the Guesswork Out of Silver Prices

For ease of explanation, I’ll base our example on the iShares Silver Trust ETF (NYSEArca: SLV), recently priced at $27.34. For comparison purposes, the price of a single SLV share typically tracks the price of one ounce of silver, but is usually 75 to 80 cents lower.

Here’s what you do:

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How to Use Options to Hedge Against a Stock Market Correction


Read the original article at Money Morning

Stocks have been mostly higher the past five months, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average recently topping 13,000 for a few days and the Nasdaq Composite touching the key 3,000 mark on the final day of February.

However, the markets have turned erratic the last week or so, and big moves like last Tuesday’s plunge have left many investors to worry about a looming stock market correction.

Normally, that would send options-savvy investors in search of protective puts so they could lock in profits on their long stock positions.

In doing so they essentially are buying an “insurance policy” that would pay off should prices indeed turn lower in the next couple of months.

But, as readers who checked out Money Morning writer Don Miller’s Wednesday article on the VIX Indicator, which measures trading activity in options on the Standard &Poor’s 500 index – and, by association, options on individual stocks comprising the major indices – last week’s jump in volatility sent put prices sharply higher.

In fact, the VIX Indicator itself jumped from just 16.83 on Feb. 23 to a reading of 20.84 on Tuesday.

And, though it has pulled back a bit since, the volatility means merely buying protective puts at this time would be a fairly costly proposition.

As an example, assume you hold 100 shares of stock in Las Vegas Sands Corp. (NYSE: LVS), having happily watched as the market’s rally carried its price from an Oct. 3, 2011, level of $36.71 to a March 1 high of $56.82.

However, the $3.33 decline by LVS last Monday and Tuesday leaves you little doubt the stock would be vulnerable in any upcoming stock market correction.

And even though the stock rebounded to $55.29 by Thursday’s close, you still feel like you need a little protection for your paper profits.

So, what do you do?

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Options ‘Too Risky’?


Read the original article at Traders Magazine - Current Issue

Three-quarters of American retail investors have never traded options. That’s according to a survey just released by TD Ameritrade.

Read the original article at Traders Magazine - Current Issue

Market Maker to Persevere


Read the original article at Traders Magazine - Current Issue

LaBranche & Co. is down, but not out. The trading house has stopped making markets in equity options on exchange floors, but vows to return as an electronic market maker.

Read the original article at Traders Magazine - Current Issue