Out Of The Money - OTM

  

Categories: Derivatives

Out-of-the-money. No money. No wins for you. Bad. Sad. Frowny face. That's what happens when you're out-of-the-money and you own an option.

The basics:

A stock option carries a strike price. If you own a call option, then that call isn't worth anything intrinsically until the underlying security is worth more than the strike price of the option.

Example:

A call option has a strike price of $20 and the underlying stock is trading at $22.30...it's $2.30 in-the-money. If the stock was trading at $17.40, then that call option (the right to pay $20 to buy a share of that stock) is $2.60 out-of-the-money.

The curveball here is time, or Theta. Your option doesn't expire for 20 weeks. It would probably still carry a lot of value. That is, the holder might ask what the odds were that, in the next 50 or so trading days, the stock could spike and trade to, say, $21.30, and then carry intrinsic value of $1.30? If it's a volatile stock, odds are probably good, i.e. that call option with a strike price at $20, expiring in 4-5 months, is probably still worth a fair pot of money, even if the stock today is trading below the strike price, like at $18.32 or whatever.

See: VIX. See: Black-Scholes. See: Theta Decay.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What Is a Put Option?83 Views

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finance a la shmoop what is a put option? hot potato hot potato

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ow ow! yeah remember that game well nobody wanted the potato, poor thing. the

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players wanted to put it in someone else's hands. well put options kind [glue put around a flaming potato]

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of work the same way. a put option is the right or option or choice to sell a

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stock or a bond at a given price to someone by a certain end date.

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all right example time. you bought netflix stock at the IPO a zillion years

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ago at $1 a share. that's you know splits adjusted. all right now it's a hundred

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bucks a share. if you sell it you pay taxes on a gain of 99 dollars a share. in

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California that would be a tax of something like almost 40 bucks. well the

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stock was a hundred but you keep only something like 60. feels totally unfair.

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right so you really don't want to sell your stock but you're nervous about the [graph shown]

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next few months that Netflix will crater for a while and go down ten

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maybe twenty dollars. longer term though you think it'll hit 300. so this is the

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perfect setup to maybe look at buying some put options on Netflix. if the stock

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goes down your put options go up. with Netflix volatile but at a hundred bucks

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a share ,you look up the price of an $80 strike price put option expiring in

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December, and you know that's mid-september now .for five bucks a share

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you can protect your stock for the next few months .think about it like temporary [stocks placed in vault]

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term life insurance. you pay the five dollars a share in the stock goes down

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to 82 by mid December, worst of all worlds. well not only did you lose the $5

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a share but your stock has lost $18 in value. but had Netflix really cratered

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and gone to say $60 a share well you would have exercised your put and sold

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your shares at 80 bucks. well those put options you paid $5 for

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would be been worth 15 bucks a share. in buying that put option you've [equation shown]

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guaranteed that your loss will be no more than a $75 value for your Netflix

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position at least for that time period and ignoring taxes. well remember that

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options expire after December whatever like the third Friday of the month it's

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usually when options expire, you then have no protection and your shares float

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along naked. naked? really who knew accounting could get so [paper put option goes "skinny dipping".]

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raunchy. yeah well that's naked put options.

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that's what they really are people.

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