You believe that the stock you have been researching is going to decrease in price during a given time frame regardless of general market conditions. You are familiar with short stock positions but are wondering if there is a more efficient trade to use your available money to express this investment idea.
Options, a type of derivatives contract, are one possible solution for efficiently gaining exposure to stock performance. They are classified as derivatives because the value of the options contract is “derived” or based on the price of something else (in this case, a stock). Remember that with all choices there are risks and benefits that we need to fully understand. This allows us to make informed decisions before using products to express investment opinions.
Call options give the holder the right, but not obligation, to purchase a security (like a stock) at a predetermined price known as the strike price on a future date in time. Let’s explore this building block of financial choice in greater detail together.
Fun fact: Why is it called a “call”? Quite simply because the purchaser of a call option has the right to “call stock away” from the seller of the call option.
First, let’s learn options contract language to understand the details for when we sell, or are “short,” a call option. Each standardized listed options contract has a minimum set of specifications that sets the terms of the agreement between the buyer and the seller:
With that in mind, we can now explore what it means to sell a call or have a short call position. A short call is the obligationto sell stock at the strike price on a future date in time.
Let’s focus on the difference between long calls (buying calls) and short calls (selling calls) to reinforce the contractual difference. The call buyer controls the decision to exercise the right to purchase the underlying at the strike price, not the call seller. When a call buyer exercises the right, the seller is assigned, or obligated, to sell stock at the strike price.
When you sell call options contracts, you collect money to establish the position. Let’s refer to this as the premium collected. The net premium collectedalso includes the offsetting costs of fees and commissions.
As a strategy, the short call is considered a “single-leg” strategy because it utilizes only one options contract. As we build on our understanding, we will explore two-leg and multi-leg strategies as well.
Selling call options, by design, is a capital-efficient way to express a bearish opinion on a stock or the market; we anticipate value decreasing and price declining. The trade-off for generating income or collecting money with the short call is the unlimited upside loss potential of the position.
Sell 10 XYZ January 50 calls for $1.45
Assume the current XYZ stock price is $50
How do we generate income on our bearish stock opinion with the embedded risk obligation to sell 1000 shares of XYZ stock for $50 in January, if assigned?
(Note: Total shares represented = quantity of options contracts x options contract multiplier = 10 x 100 = 1000)
We first complete our transaction by collecting $1,450 less fees and commissions. The transaction itself generates income for your account while obligating you to sell stock at $50, the strike price, in January if you are assigned to do so. The assignment risk increases as the price of the stock rises toward $50 and assignment is highly likely once the stock price rises above $50.
Before we complete the transaction to sell calls, let’s look a bit further at the decisions we face before and on the contract’s expiration date:
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