OPTIONS TRADING FUNDAMENTALS
Master Calls, Puts & The Power of Leverage
WHAT ARE OPTIONS CONTRACTS?
Options Basics
- • A contract giving you the RIGHT (not obligation)
- • To buy or sell stock at a specific price
- • Before or on a specific date (expiration)
- • You pay a premium for this right
- Stocks: You OWN shares forever (until sold)
- Options: You have RIGHTS that EXPIRE
- • Options have an expiration date
- • After expiration, worthless or exercised
- Apple stock = $180 today
- You buy: 1 Call option @ $185 strike
- Expiration: 30 days from now
- Premium paid: $3.50 per share
- Total cost: $350 (100 shares per contract)
- • Your option is "in the money"
- • Intrinsic value: $195 - $185 = $10
- • Option worth ~$10+ per share = $1,000+
- • Profit: $1,000 - $350 = $650 (186% gain!)
- • Your option expires worthless
- • No reason to exercise (can buy at $180)
- • Loss: $350 (100% of premium paid)
- Limited risk (premium), unlimited potential profit
Calls vs Puts
- Right to BUY stock at strike price
- • You're BULLISH (expect price UP)
- • Want leverage on upside
- • Lower capital than buying stock
- • TSLA @ $250, you buy $260 Call
- • Premium: $5 ($500 total)
- • TSLA rises to $280
- • Call worth $20+ = $2,000+
- • Profit: $1,500 (300% gain)
- Compare to buying 100 shares:
- • Cost: $25,000 (100 x $250)
- • Profit at $280: $3,000 (12% gain)
- • Options gave 25x more return %!
- Right to SELL stock at strike price
- • You're BEARISH (expect price DOWN)
- • Want to profit from decline
- • Hedge existing stock positions
- • SPY @ $500, you buy $490 Put
- • Premium: $4 ($400 total)
- • SPY drops to $470
- • Put worth $20 = $2,000
- • Profit: $1,600 (400% gain)
OPTIONS TERMINOLOGY - Essential Vocabulary
Core Terms
- • The price at which you can buy/sell
- • Fixed when you buy the option
- • Example: $150 Call means buy at $150
- • The PRICE of the option contract
- • What you pay to own the option
- • Quoted per share (x 100 for total)
- • Example: $5 premium = $500 total cost
- • Last day option can be traded/exercised
- • After this, option is worthless or auto-exercised
- • Standard: 3rd Friday of month
- • Weekly options available too
- • 1 option contract = 100 shares
- • Always multiply premium by 100
- Calls: Stock price > Strike price
- Puts: Stock price < Strike price
- • Has intrinsic value
- Stock price ~ Strike price
- • Most liquid options
- Calls: Stock price < Strike price
- Puts: Stock price > Strike price
- • No intrinsic value, all time value
Value Components
- • The "real" value if exercised now
- Intrinsic = Stock Price - Strike Price
- Example: Stock $155, Strike $150
- Intrinsic = $5
- Intrinsic = Strike Price - Stock Price
- Example: Stock $145, Strike $150
- Intrinsic = $5
- • Premium above intrinsic value
- • Represents potential for profit
- • Decays as expiration approaches
- Premium = Intrinsic + Extrinsic
- • Stock: $155 | Strike: $150 Call
- • Premium: $8
- • Intrinsic: $5 (155 - 150)
- • Extrinsic: $3 (8 - 5)
- OTM - No intrinsic
- ATM - At strike
- ITM - Has value
- For CALLS: Stock below strike | Strike | Stock above strike
Exercise & Assignment
- • YOU (option holder) use your right
- • Call: Buy shares at strike price
- • Put: Sell shares at strike price
- • Requires full capital for shares
- • Rarely! Usually better to sell option
- • Only if deeply ITM at expiration
- • Or for dividend capture
- • YOU (option seller) are obligated
- • Call: Must SELL shares at strike
- • Put: Must BUY shares at strike
- • Happens if buyer exercises
- • Can happen anytime (American style)
- • Most common at expiration
- • Especially if ITM by $0.01+
- • OCC auto-exercises if ITM $0.01+
- • At expiration Friday 5:30pm ET
- • Can cause surprise positions!
- • Close options before expiration
- • Don't let them expire ITM
- • Avoid exercise/assignment surprises
- • Manage positions actively
- T+1: Exercise/assignment settles next business day
BUYING vs SELLING OPTIONS - Critical Differences
BUYING Options (Long)
- • Paying premium to own the RIGHT
- • No obligation, only opportunity
- • You control when to exercise/sell
- • Max loss = premium paid
- • Can't lose more than initial cost
- • Calls: Stock can rise infinitely
- • Puts: Stock can drop to $0
- • Control 100 shares for fraction of cost
- • Amplified percentage returns
- • You choose expiration date
- • Match to your outlook
- • Option loses value each day
- • Working against you
- • Stock must move past breakeven
- • Small moves = still lose money
Best for: Directional bets with defined risk
SELLING Options (Short)
- • Collecting premium from buyer
- • Taking on OBLIGATION
- • Must fulfill if assigned
- • Cash in account right away
- • Yours to keep if expires worthless
- • Option loses value daily
- • You profit as it decays
- • 60-70% of options expire worthless
- • Probability on your side
- • Max gain = premium collected
- • Capped upside
- • Naked calls: Theoretically infinite
- • Naked puts: Stock to $0
- • Can lose WAY more than premium
- • Must maintain collateral
- • Ties up significant capital
Best for: Income generation, covered strategies
WHAT DETERMINES OPTION PRICES?
Key Factors
- • Most important factor
- • ITM options cost more
- • OTM options cost less
- Stock at $150:
- • $140 Call = $12 (ITM)
- • $150 Call = $5 (ATM)
- • $160 Call = $1 (OTM)
- • More time = higher premium
- • More opportunity for movement
- • 7 days to expiration: $2
- • 30 days to expiration: $5
- • 90 days to expiration: $8
- • Market's expectation of movement
- • Higher IV = higher premiums
- • Lower IV = lower premiums
- • Blue chip stocks: 15-30%
- • Tech/growth: 40-70%
- • Meme stocks: 100-300%+
- • Minor impact (usually)
- • Higher rates = calls worth more
- • Affects call/put parity
- • Calls less valuable before ex-dividend
Black-Scholes Model
- • Mathematical model for option pricing
- • Won Nobel Prize in Economics (1997)
- • Used by traders worldwide
- 1. Current stock price
- 2. Strike price
- 3. Time to expiration
- 4. Risk-free interest rate
- 5. Implied volatility (most critical)
- • "Fair value" of option
- • Based on probability
- • Theoretical price
- • Actual prices can differ
- • Supply/demand affects pricing
- • Market makers use adjustments
- • THE most important variable
- • It's "implied" from option prices
- • Not the same as historical volatility
- • Earnings announcements
- • Major news events
- • Market uncertainty/crashes
- • Option premiums are EXPENSIVE
- • Calm, trending markets
- • Option premiums are CHEAP
Pricing Examples
- Stock: $100
- Strike: $100 Call
- DTE: 30 days
- IV: 30%
- Premium: ~$3.50
- • Intrinsic: $0 (ATM)
- • Extrinsic: $3.50 (all time value)
- Stock: $110
- Strike: $100 Call
- DTE: 30 days
- IV: 30%
- Premium: ~$13.50
- • Intrinsic: $10 (110 - 100)
- • Extrinsic: $3.50 (time value)
- Stock: $100
- Strike: $110 Call
- DTE: 30 days
- IV: 30%
- Premium: ~$1.20
- • Intrinsic: $0 (OTM)
- • Extrinsic: $1.20 (less time value)
- • ATM has most extrinsic value
- • Deep ITM/OTM have less
- • Trade-off: probability vs leverage
OPTIONS STRATEGIES - The Four Categories
Bullish Strategies
- • Buy call option
- • Max loss: Premium paid
- • Max gain: Unlimited
- • Best for: Strong bullish outlook
- • Buy lower strike call
- • Sell higher strike call
- • Max loss: Net debit
- • Max gain: Spread width - debit
- • Best for: Moderate bullish outlook
- • Sell put with cash backing
- • Collect premium
- • Willing to buy stock at strike
- • Best for: Want to own stock cheaper
- • Own 100 shares
- • Sell call against them
- • Collect premium as income
- • Best for: Generate income on holdings
- • Expect stock to rise
Bearish & Neutral Strategies
- • Buy put option
- • Profit from stock decline
- • Max loss: Premium paid
- • Buy higher strike put
- • Sell lower strike put
- • Defined risk & reward
- • Sell OTM call & put
- • Buy further OTM call & put
- • Profit if stock stays in range
- • Three strikes, same expiration
- • Profit at middle strike
- • Sell ATM call & put
- • Profit from low volatility
- • Unlimited risk both directions!
CRITICAL RISK WARNINGS
- Options Expire Worthless: 60-70% of options expire worthless. Buying options = you're fighting time decay every single day. The clock is always ticking against you.
- 100% Loss Is Common: Unlike stocks, options can (and often do) go to $0. Every dollar of premium can vanish. This is NOT like holding stock where you always own something.
- Selling Naked = Unlimited Risk: Selling uncovered calls or puts can result in losses FAR exceeding your account. One bad trade can bankrupt you. NEVER sell naked without full understanding.
- Leverage Cuts Both Ways: Yes, you can make 200% in a day. You can also lose 100% in a day. Options amplify BOTH gains and losses. Most beginners focus only on the gain side.
- Assignment Can Surprise You: If you sell options, you CAN be assigned at any time. Waking up to 100 shares you didn't want (or can't afford) is a real risk. Manage positions actively.
- Complexity != Better: Multi-leg strategies look sophisticated but add execution risk, commissions, and complexity. Master simple strategies first. Iron condors can blow up accounts just as easily as naked options.
- Options Are NOT Investments: They're speculative instruments with expiration dates. Don't treat your retirement account like a casino. If you can't afford to lose the premium, don't buy the option.
- Start Small Or Blow Up: Paper trade for 3+ months. Then trade 1 contract at a time. Scale slowly. The #1 mistake is going too big too fast. Options will humble you. Respect them.
OPTIONS TRADING DISCLAIMER
Options trading involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. You can lose 100% of your premium and potentially more if selling options. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Options are complex instruments requiring specialized knowledge - do not trade them based solely on this introductory guide. Examples provided are for educational illustration only and do not constitute recommendations. Actual option prices, Greeks, and strategies will vary significantly from examples shown. Time decay, volatility changes, and other factors can cause rapid losses. Assignment and exercise can occur at any time and may result in positions you cannot afford. Selling naked options can result in unlimited losses. Margin requirements and account minimums vary by broker. Most options expire worthless - this is a statistical fact. Success rates are extremely low for beginners. The Black-Scholes model is theoretical and may not reflect actual market prices. Implied volatility is not a prediction of future movement. This material is for educational purposes only and does not constitute trading advice or recommendations. Options trading requires approval from your broker based on experience and financial situation. Paper trading success does not guarantee live trading success. Consult licensed financial professionals before trading options. TradeHive and its affiliates are not liable for trading losses. You trade at your own risk. Only trade with risk capital you can afford to lose entirely.
© 2025 TradeHive. All rights reserved. For educational purposes only. Not financial or investment advice.