Learn How To Trade Options In Our Lifetime Options Course Overview

By Johnny M Junior

Learn how to trade options in our lifetime options course. Options are a strong instrument that every investor should become knowledgeable about.

Before you start, forget about anything that you have heard regarding the concern over risks when trading options. Options were created to manage and limit potential risks. In fact, there are some option trades that can be done with no risk at all.

When investing in the stock market, you are always taking a chance. You can limit your risks two ways. Anytime stock is bought, the buyer is betting when the stock increases in value. It is not a guarantee that this will happen. If it was guaranteed, all assets would go into buying that particular stock. When a buyer also purchases options, that buyer is limiting the risk of losing money while being assured that there is no limit to potential earnings. You can speculate and hedge when purchasing options which is what options do for you. There are actually some option strategies which have nearly no risk at all involved. These spreads can take years to discover if you do not learn from a mentor. In fact, most option traders never learn them.

Other than guessing, investors choose options for hedging. A hedge is a means of protecting your portfolio. It is very similar to purchasing insurance. It protects you from disaster, but you hope it will never be used. You can sleep easier at night knowing that you are protected. It's like buying insurance for your home. The chances of your home being completely destroyed are pretty small. Yes, we continue to keep our coverage. We do this because our homes are valuable and the loss would be devastating. As a result, we are more than happy to pay a company to take this risk for us. If you use specific options strategies as a way to hedge the portfolio, you are doing the same thing.

The prices of options are based on the price of an underlying stock.

After you decide whether you want to hedge or speculate with your options, you will also need to decide which certain options fit your needs. When you look up an options chain, you will discover that there many to choose from. Knowing that you want to hedge or speculate is not enough. You also need to decide if your plan calls for trading a put or a call option, how long you want the expiration date to be, along with what strike price you want to trade. This all sounds Greek if you are new to options, but after a while this all becomes second nature.

The cost of options is determined by using an intricate differential equation.

There are five necessary pieces of evaluating costs of pricing options. They are: Asset volatility, Underlying Asset Price, Time to Expiration, Option strike price and Risk-free rate.

Each ingredient plays a role in establishing the value of an option. As an investor, you can only manage two of the ingredients: strike price and expiration. Take into account what your needs are and choose the one that will give you the desired results. Advice to help you on your way:

Hedging: a simple strategy to protect the downside of the market is something like a longer expiration and using puts on out of money options.

Speculating: some like to buy in the money calls for an upward move in the market. This is just a basic, entry level strategy.

A number of risks and rewards are part of the in or out of the money options that all investors should know. An ITM option is going to be more money to buy; however, the possibility of it still having value upon expiration is higher. An OTM option is cheaper initially but the chances of it having any value when it expires is lower. - 29970

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