The Reserve Bank of India slashed repo rate (at which banks borrow money from the RBI) by 25 basis points but kept cash reserve ratio and statutory liquidity ratio unchanged.
FOR TWO DAYS FREE TRIAL OF OPTION FILL UP THE FORM GIVEN HERE>>>>
FOR TWO DAYS FREE TRIAL OF OPTION FILL UP THE FORM GIVEN HERE>>>>
DIVIDENDS AND COVERED CALL WRITING
EXERCISING A
CALL OPTION FOR THE DIVIDEND
QUESTION
"In covered call writing, the ex-dividend date can be more important than
the expiration date. If the call is exercised, there is no dividend for the
covered call writer. It is possible to have a negative return."
REPLY
When the call owner exercises and collects the dividend, you should NEVER have a negative return. If you discover that you have no profit (or very little profit), then you did not collect a sufficient premium when writing the call option. In other words, you made a serious error.
FOR EXAMPLE:
When the call owner exercises and collects the dividend, you should NEVER have a negative return. If you discover that you have no profit (or very little profit), then you did not collect a sufficient premium when writing the call option. In other words, you made a serious error.
FOR EXAMPLE:
Stock is $52 per share and pays a $0.50 dividend.
Ex-dividend date comes before the call option -- the one that you sold -- expires.
Let's assume that
Ex-dividend date comes before the call option -- the one that you sold -- expires.
Let's assume that
·
You write a call (any expiration month) with a $50 strike price
·
You are assigned an exercise notice and sell your shares at $50
·
You do not collect the dividend
Then - you still earn a profit anytime that you
sell the call and collect a premium that is more than $2.00 (the
option's intrinsic value) -- as long as you are eventually assigned an
exercise notice.
It is a very big mistake to sell any option when there is no profit potential. Never depend on collecting the dividend when the option is significantly in the money. Sure, you may collect the dividend, but do not count on doing so. The option sale -- all by itself -- must be enough to guarantee a profit if you are ever assigned an exercise notice. If the stock price declines and the option expires worthless, then no profit is guaranteed because there is risk of losing money with any strategy that involves stock ownership because it may undergo a large price decline.
It is a very big mistake to sell any option when there is no profit potential. Never depend on collecting the dividend when the option is significantly in the money. Sure, you may collect the dividend, but do not count on doing so. The option sale -- all by itself -- must be enough to guarantee a profit if you are ever assigned an exercise notice. If the stock price declines and the option expires worthless, then no profit is guaranteed because there is risk of losing money with any strategy that involves stock ownership because it may undergo a large price decline.