Wednesday, 4 May 2016

FUTURE & OPTION COMBO STRATEGY FOR MAY'2016

"SELL HINDALCO FUTURE @ 92.5" 
"BUY HINDALCO 92.5 CALL @ 4"
"BUY HINDALCO 92.5 PUT @ 4"
FOR TGT UPDATES KEEP READING...

Saturday, 23 April 2016

Friday, 22 April 2016

OBLIGATIONS OF AN OPTION SELLER

UNDERSTANDING ASSIGNMENT RISK
Option sellers collect a cash premium. That's the primary reason that investors sell an option. When that option expires worthless, the cash premium represents the option seller's profit, but it does involve some risk of losing money. Pretty simple stuff.
Similarly, traders may sell an option as part of a spread position. Once again, collecting a cash premium drives the sale. However, this time, the cash collected is used as a hedge, or a trade that offsets the risk of owning another position. Hedging is a bit more complex than simply selling an option. For example, when you buy one call option (hoping for the stock to rally), you can sell a different option, collect some cash, and reduce the sum of money at risk -- just in case your expected rally does not occur. The concept is easy to understand once you learn to understand how options work.) About options for beginners will help.
Options do not always expire worthless, and it is essential that every option trader understands what happens when the option does not expire worthless.
Whenever you sell (write) an option that you do not already own, you become legally obligated to honor the terms of the option contract sold.
WHAT ARE THOSE OBLIGATIONS?
The call seller agrees to sell 100 shares of the underlying stock to the call owner. The trade occurs at the option strike price.  This obligation remains in effect until the option expires.
The put seller agrees to buy 100 shares of the underlying stock from the put owner. The trade occurs at the option strike price.  This obligation remains in effect until the option expires.
 WHAT TRIGGERS THE OBLIGATIONS?
The obligations are only theoretical until something happens that triggers the process. Call owners have the right to force the option seller to honor his/her obligations by exercising those rights. As soon as the call owner instructs his/her broker to exercise, the option seller's obligations are triggered.  Note that the option seller cannot force the option owner to exercise. That decision rests entirely with the option owner who bought the option and paid cash to own the right to exercise.

Tuesday, 12 April 2016

Saturday, 9 April 2016

NIFTY STRADDLE STRATEGY FOR APRIL 2016

"BUY1 LOT NIFTY 7550 CALL @ 110"
"BUY 1 LOT NIFTY 7550 PUT @79"
TOTAL INVESTMENT 14175
PAY OF TABLE :-

IS COVERED CALL WRITING FOR YOU?

ONE BASIC STRATEGY
Covered call writing is a very popular option strategy and is especially well suited for people who are first learning how options work. Once you gain a fairly good understanding of the basic concepts involving options and understand the risk and rewards associated with owning stocks, that is a good time to consider adopting this strategy.
However, there is more to this simple strategy that is apparent at first glance. It is important to understand why an investor would want to write covered calls. Thus, you want to know about the philosophy. Next it is essential to know about the risk, or what can go wrong when you buy stock and sell one call option for each 100 shares owned.
NOTE: The name of the strategy comes from the fact that the stock owner is covered -- if and when he/she is ever assigned an exercise notice on the short call option. In other words, if assigned, the trader already owns the shares and can deliver (sell) them to the person who exercised the option.
IS COVERED CALL WRITING (CCW) FOR YOU?
·         CCW is a strategy for the investor who does not believing in trying to time the market. As long as you are willing to have your cash invested in the specific stock (or index), it is a reasonable idea to own the stock and write the calls. However, if you never want to sell the stock and if your intention is to hold for a long time, then this is not a suitable strategy.
·         CCW is for the investor who wants a higher probability of earning a profit with every trade, even when the profit is limited. Clarification: The profit is earned more frequently than the trader who simply buys stock and does not hedge the position by selling a call option.

Friday, 8 April 2016

WHAT IS RISK?

DEFINING RISK FOR TRADERS
Options were designed as risk-reducing tools, yet most people begin trading options by adopting high-risk strategies.
Why does that happen?
·         Overconfidence. Traders tend to concentrate on profits and ignore the chance of losing money.
·         Some strategies "feel" safe. When investing a small sum, traders ignore the fact that they will lose money at least 90% of the time.
·         It is easy to forget that a string of small losses adds up.
·         Traders do not look at risk in enough detail.
DEFINING RISK
The term "risk" can be defined from different points of view:
A dictionary tells us that risk is 
·         A situation involving exposure to danger. For traders, that danger is a monetary loss.
·         The possibility that something bad or unpleasant (such as an injury or a loss) will happen.
·         The potential of losing something of value, compared with the potential to gain something of value. 
As a trader, I recommend using the last definition because it forces you to consider what you have to gain and compare it with what you have to lose.
In other words, do not make a trade when risk is too high for the potential gain.

Thursday, 7 April 2016

INTRODUCTION TO CALENDAR SPREADS

TIME SPREADS
DEFINITION: A calendar spread is a position with two options; buy one option and sell another. Both options are calls or both are puts, with the same underlying asset and strike price, but different expiration dates.  Buying the option that expires later, is BUYING the calendar spread.  Buying the option that expires earlier, is SELLING the calendar spread. Traders almost always buy calendars because the margin requirement is steep for sellers (For margin considerations, the short option is considered to be naked, or unhedged). 
At one time, it was common to refer to calendar spreads as 'time spreads.'
Example 
     Buy 10 IBM Jul 18 '14 100 calls
     Sell 10 IBM Jun 20 '14 100 calls
The calendar is commonly used when the trader believes that the:
·         Underlying stock will be priced near the strike price at, or near, expiration. 
·         Implied volatility of the longer-term option will increase over the lifetime of the trade.
Note: The options do not have to expire in consecutive weeks or months.
The distance between expiration dates is immaterial; the only requirements for a calendar spread are that the underlying asset and strike price are identical.
How does the calendar earn a profit? 
The calendar spread takes advantage of the fact that options with shorter lifetimes decay more quickly than options with longer lifetimes. Thus, all else being equal, as time passes both options lose value, but the spread value increases.
The world is not quite that simple.  If the rate of time decay were the only factor, calendars would be profitable almost all the time.  Other factors affect the calendar spread. The two primary factors are:
1. STOCK PRICEThe calendar reaches is highest value when the underlying stock is priced exactly at the strike price as expiration arrives. The data in the table below illustrates the point.
ASSUMPTIONS: IBM is $XXX per share; date: Jun 18, 2014, 4:00 PM ET;  Implied Volatility is 45.
NOTE: When IBM is $100 or less, the Jun 100 call expires worthless and the value of the Jul 100 call is the value of the calendar spread.
When IBM is above $100, the Jun call is in the money.  For the values in the table, assume that the IBM Jun 100 call is bought at parity (the option's intrinsic value, or the amount by which it's in the money) and the IBM Jul 100 call is sold at it's value.
 
IBM Price 
 88
 92
 96
100
104
108
112
Jun 100
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$4.00
$8.00
$12.00
Jul 100
$0.93
$1.80
$3.13
$4.97
$7.32
$10.13
$13.31
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Spread
$0.93
$1.80
$3.13
$4.97
$3.32
$2.13
$1.31
 Look at the data in the bottom row.  The value of the spread is highest when the stock is near the strike price and steadily decreases as the stock moves away from the strike in either direction.

Wednesday, 6 April 2016

ADJUSTING A LOSING TRADE

TO GET FREE OPTION TIPS FILL UP THE FORM GIVEN HERE>>>>
RISK MANAGEMENT
When you own a directional trade that is not working (i.e., the price of your underlying asset is moving in the wrong direction or too much time has passed), eventually you must do something to mitigate risk. The basic choices are: exit the entire position, reduce the size of the position, or make a trade that reduces risk Such trades are known as adjustments.
For example, an adjustment may be necessary when you sell a put spread and the stock price falls:
Bought 5 XYZ Jul 15 '16 80 puts
Sold     5 XYZ Jul 15 '16 90 puts

The stock was $96 when the trade was made, but now (two months prior to expiration day) XYZ is $91.
It is reasonable to be nervous about the future value of this position. The position is long (i.e., Delta is positive) and getting more positive (due to negative Gamma) as the price falls. You already are losing money and that loss will increase if the stock price continues to decline. It is time (or perhaps it is already past time) to do something about risk.
In this scenario, it may seem that the best strategy is to sell call spreads (to turn the position into an iron condor) to gain negative delta. It is true that this adjustment offsets a portion of your downside risk because if the market continues to fall, the call spread will lose value and provide some gains to offset the expanding loss from the original put trade. What makes call selling so attractive is that it provides positive theta, and all premium sellers love positive theta. Also, adjusting the put side in this scenario locks in a loss -- and traders hate doing that. It feels much better to sell calls so that the trader can make money from the adjustment, even though the entire position continues to bleed and little has been done to alleviate the amount of money at risk.
However, the primary attractiveness of selling call spreads as an adjustment is that it increases the potential reward. When your trade is underwater, it is tempting to make an adjustment that has the chance not only to recover the current loss, but to add additional profits. Please, ignore that temptation. 
When a trader is already long delta because he/she is short naked puts and the stock is falling, the same principle applies. I urge that trader not to sell calls or calls spreads as an adjustment method. It is far more effective to adjust the put position because that is where risk is.

Tuesday, 5 April 2016

THE RESERVE BANK OF INDIA SLASHED REPO RATE BY 25 BASIS

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>>>>

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:
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
·         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.