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Introduction to Call Options (1)
I have used an option on land as an analogy to help explain the concept of options. Hopefully, it will serve that purpose well. In fact, options on various items exist in many business markets and segments so it's likely you may have run into them before.
An option represents a legally binding agreement whereby the option buyer purchases the right to buy an item represented by the option, at a predetermined price, by no later than an agreed deadline. For example, with respect to an option on land, the Owner of Blackacre, a potentially attractive piece of land which Owner just bought for $50,000, is willing to sell a Developer an option on this property. Owner and Developer agree that Developer can purchase the right to buy Blackacre no later than November 1, 2009 for a price of $55,000. The price for this option right, known as the premium, is set at $5,000. As is almost always the case, the option price is non-refundable so Owner keeps the option premium no matter what happens; whether or not Blackacre is sold to Developer.
While Developer can walk away and decline to buy Blackacre, Owner is obligated to sell the property to Developer at the agreed price of $55,000 if Developer decides to exercise his option on or before November 1st. Obviously, Developer is not going to exercise if Blackacre is worth less than $55,000 by November 1st, the price level above which Developer makes a profit.
In this case, Developer is entitled to all profits from Blackacre after the option is exercised while Owner will be limited to a profit of $5,000 on the property itself plus the option premium, less commissions. In short, if Developer decides that Blackacre is worth less than $55,000 when November 1st comes around, he can simply decline to purchase Blackacre, losing only the cost of the option he purchased. In other words, the option buyer’s risk of loss is limited to the premium paid, plus commissions. The option seller’s risk is that he foregoes all profit above the strike price and is left holding on to a less attractive property if the price goes down.
Note that in this real estate based example, there are probably few buyers around who can purchase the option from Developer should he decide to sell it. That is not the case with listed options where there are many buyers available to whom Developer can sell. In a listed options market, Owner can buy an identical option to the one he sold and thereby close out his position. More on this later in the discussion on characteristics of options.
Similarly to the Blackacre situation, in the stock market, you or I can buy a listed option on a particular stock, say IBM, because we think, as Developer did with Blackacre, that it’s a potentially attractive property. In addition, by purchasing an option at this time, we can wait and see if our estimate of IBM’s value is correct before putting up all the money required that would be required if we were to purchase 100 shares of IBM today.
Assume that IBM is currently selling at $75 a share and that I decide to purchase an option to buy these shares by next November at a price of $80 a share based on my current stock study based evaluation of IBM. Let’s further assume that this option is listed at a cost of $1.70 per share. Since options sell in 100 share bunches, meaning that an option is written on and controls rights with respect to 100 shares, I’m obliged to pay $170, the premium, or $1.70 x 100 (plus commissions) for this option.
As the option buyer, I now have the right to purchase those 100 shares of IBM at $80 a share up to the expiration date of the option, but I have no obligation to do so, in the same way as Developer could decline to buy Blackacre. Further, as the holder of a listed equity option, I don’t have to hold it until expiration or exercise to sell it if I want to. In other words, I can sell my option to another buyer before the expiration date to capture an increase in the value of the option without having to buy and then sell the 100 shares of IBM that I control as an option owner.
Please note that you can buy more than one option at a time. I’m only using a single option in the workshop as the basis for explaining and discussing options at this time. We’ll get into the details of how many options to buy or sell at a later time.
The option described above is known as a call option. The name is derived from the concept that as the option buyer or holder I can “call” the stock, or parcel of land in the case of Blackacre, away from the seller at the terms and prior to expiration of the period specified by my option. Simply put, a call option is an agreement to buy whatever the option covers; a piece of land, a painting or shares of stock at an agreed price (the strike price) by a specific time (the expiration date) for an agreed amount (the premium). It should be noted that an option is good only to its expiration date. After expiration, an option has no market value.
Saul...