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 Option Trading

What is Option Trading?

What is Options Trading?

Options are contracts that give the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell the underlying asset at a specific price on a specific date. They are called derivatives because they derive their value from underlying assets. Options trading is a strategy traders use options to speculate, earn income, and hedge risk. 
Options trading can look intimidating, but when used correctly, it offers high profits, which cannot be earned alone from trading shares and ETFs. In options trading, traders speculate on the future direction of the share price or market. Before understanding how options trading works, let’s understand the commonly used terms in options trading.

Commonly Used Option Trading Terminologies

How Does Options Trading Work?

In options trading, if traders are bullish about the market, they can buy a call option, and if they want to bet on falling prices they buy a put option. As a buyer of a call option, traders will fix a price at which they will buy the shares on a future date. In contrast, as a buyer of the put option, traders will fix a price at which they will sell the shares on a future date.

Options trading is a low-cost way to speculate about an asset’s market or share price. This is because, as a buyer of a call or a put option, traders will have the right but not the obligation to fulfil the contract. If the contract is not profitable on the date of expiry, then traders can choose not to exercise their right. In such a case, they will only lose out on the premium.

Traders can also sell the call or put option if they want to speculate about the markets falling or rising and pocket the premium amount immediately. But when they sell, they have to fulfil their side of the contract.
Traders can simultaneously buy call and put options to make money in the short term. They can buy and sell options in different combinations, and each combination is called a strategy.

Types of Options Trading Strategies

The following are the types of option trading strategies that every trader must know.

Bull call spread: It is a bullish strategy where the trader will buy a call option and sell another one with a strike price higher than the former one. He is bullish about the market and will benefit when the underlying security price rises.

Bull put spread: Here, the trader will buy a put option and sell another put option with a strike price higher than the former one. The trader will benefit when the price of the underlying security increases.

Synthetic call or Protective put: In a synthetic call the trader buys the underlying asset and also a put option of that asset. If the asset prices rise, there are unlimited profits; if the price falls, the loss will be limited to the premium paid for the put option. 

Bear call spread: It is a bearish strategy where the trader buys a call option and sells another call option with a strike price lower than the former. The profits are earned only when the price of the asset falls. In this strategy, both the profits and losses are limited. 

Bear put spread: When the traders expect the markets to go down moderately, they buy a put option and sell a put option with a strike price lower than the former. The losses and profits are limited. Profits occur when the asset price falls. 

Synthetic put or protective call: The trader earns profits when the markets go down. Here, this strategy combines a future short position with buying a call option. The profit is unlimited when the price falls, and the loss is limited to the premium paid. 

Long and short straddle: It is a market-neutral trading strategy where the trader combines the call and puts options at the same strike price. A long straddle gives unlimited profits with limited loss. In contrast, a short straddle gives unlimited loss, and profits are limited to the premium earned.

Long and short strangle: The trader will buy a call option with a higher strike price than a put option in a long strangle. The profits are unlimited, and loss is limited to the premium paid. Short strangle involves selling a call with a higher strike price than the put. The profit is limited to the premium, and the loss is unlimited.

Long and short butterfly: Butterfly combines the bull and bear spreads and limits the profits and losses to a particular amount. It is a neutral strategy with fixed risk and capped profits.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Option Trading

Advantages of options trading

Disadvantages of options trading

Things to Remember While Trading in Options

Frequently Asked Questions

How much money do you need to trade options?

You won’t need a considerable amount of money to start trading options. You can start with an amount as small as Rs 2 lakhs. As you understand options trading better, you can increase your capital.

What is a lot size in options trading?

SEBI decides the lot size and uses it to control price quotes in the market. A lot size is a total number of contracts in one option (call or put). It is the minimum number of shares one can buy in one transaction. The standard option contract size is 100 shares.

Can anyone do options trading?

Technically anyone can trade in options, but it is best to gain some market knowledge before trading in options. This is because the losses are enormous, and one might burn their pockets without proper knowledge.

Are options better than stocks?

It is difficult to say which is better, options or stocks. Options are better for active traders, whereas stocks are better for long-term investors. Both options and stocks complement each other in a portfolio as one can use stocks for long-term wealth creation, and options for short-term hedging.

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