T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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669.1 | derivative securities - 101 | USCTR1::BJORGENSEN | | Tue Jan 25 1994 22:43 | 18 |
| A future is generally a CONTRACT to buy the underlying security at a given
price at a some time in the future. If you are long, expecting the prices to
up, your risk is limited to the price of the underlying security. It you are
short, you have unlimited risk.
An option is just that, and OPTION to sell or buy (puts and calls) a
security at some time in the future. Your risk is generally limited to
cost of the option.
I'm sure there are better explanations, but that is generally the idea.
Tell that broker that is soliciting your business to take a hike then
do some reading on your own and decide for yourself if that's where you
want to put/risk your money.
> What are some other more conservative ways to invest in gold
Buy gold itself, or gold stocks/mutual funds
|
669.2 | Futures<>Options | RTOEU::KPLUSZYNSKI | | Wed Jan 26 1994 08:31 | 62 |
| Options and futures are not the same, but both are high risk
investments. Options can result in a 100% loss of the investment capital,
futures may cause even greater losses.
With futures you buy an amount of gold for today's market price but
delivery in the future. You enter into an obligation to pay a price
at the delivery day, and that price is fixed today for the lifetime
of the contract.
The daily value of the contract however will fluctuate with the daily
price of gold. If gold is rising in the future, then you have bought
low and will (after delivery) be able to sell high. If gold is falling you are loosing
money.
The buyer of a futures contract is obliged to buy gold from someone
else. If the buyer is loosing money in this deal, he might be tempted
to not fulfill his obligation, thereby imposing a risk on the seller
of the futures contract.
This risk is covered by the requirement for the buyer to pay
a 'margin' on the futures contract. The margin is calculated in such a
way that at any given time during the lifetime of the contract, the
actual value of the gold to be delivered plus the current margin amount
always adds up to at least the final payment obligation.
You have to pay the margin to your broker when entering into a futures
contract. The margin is NOT a buying price but more like an insurance
premium you have to pay.
With the daily value of gold changing throughout the lifetime of the
contract, the margin requirement also changes. If gold is rising, the
margin will be decreasing, as the value of the gold makes up for a
larger piece of your obligation. This is the sweet side of the futures
contract: your broker will pay money back to you. If gold is falling,
the margin amount increases. If you are not able or willing to do so,
the broker will sell the contract, thereby fixing your loss. This is
the sour side of the futures game.
Even if gold is rising in the long term, there may be significant price
dips in the meantime. You might be forced to add fresh money in
addition to the already invested margin. If gold does not recover, this
might add up to more than 100% loss of the initial investment.
With an option you are buying the right, but not the obligation, to buy
gold at a given price. This right is valid for a limited period of
time. A March 400 Call for instance gives the right to buy gold for
$400 an ounce between now and march.
The price of that right depends on the time until expiration and the
actual price of gold. If gold rises above $400, you may use that right
to buy for $400 and sell immediately for the higher market price.
If gold is below $400, then there is no intrinsic value to the right.
Your risk with buying options is a loss of 100% of your investment.
While gold had been rising about 20-25% last year, some goldmines have
been rising up to 300-400 %. There is a lot of volatility in these
stocks and they can go down as fast as they have risen.
A conservative approach to gold would be gold coins.
Klaus
|
669.3 | Price of an option??? | ZENDIA::FERGUSON | Red X | Wed Jan 26 1994 09:45 | 19 |
| I have a question regarding price.
In the journal, the stock options are listed as follows:
-Call- -Put-
Option/Strike Exp Vol Last Vol Last
Digital 30 JAN 40 4 3/4 ....
34 1/2 30 FEB 10 5 3/8 20 7/16
34 1/2 35 JAN 149 1 1/8 50 1 5/8
34 1/2 35 FEB 203 2 34 2
I assume these are contracts to buy (call) or sell (put) 100 shares of
the security for the listed strike price. the option is the current price
of the stock. my question is, what is the cost, to me, of the, say FEB 35
calls listed above? $2.00 ? or $200.00 ?
|
669.4 | $200 | RTOEU::KPLUSZYNSKI | | Wed Jan 26 1994 09:52 | 6 |
| The price is per option, therefore it's $200 (100 options x $2)
The volume data is per contract (=100 options).
Klaus
|
669.5 | Investment 101 cont.... | CARROL::YOUNG | where is this place in space??? | Wed Jan 26 1994 10:11 | 13 |
| Klaus...thanks for the explanation...questions though. Your option
description i assume is for an option CALL.
How does an option PUT work??? i assume you buy the securities now for
sale during a certain period. If the price goes down then you have the
option to sell the security at the purchased price, but if the security
goes up you would then lose money....am i right on this??? Is this what
is technically termed 'shorting' the market (ie; anticipating a securty
price decline)???
So many 'options, so little time....
Doug
|
669.6 | Puts & Shorts | POSSUM::BOUCHARD | The enemy is wise | Wed Jan 26 1994 11:54 | 29 |
| re: .5
Whenever you buy an option (call or put) you are purchasing the right,
but not the obligation, to do something. Your maximum potential loss
is always 100% of the purchase price, but no more.
For example, I buy a DEC Feb 30 Put for $1, or $100/contract. Let's
say DEC stock is at 31 1/4. I'm betting that DEC stock is going to
decline. Assume that I hold the option until expiration. If DEC stock
is 30 or more, my option is worthless -- I have the right to sell DEC
stock at 30. If DEC is trading above 30, nobody wants my option.
If DEC stock is trading below 30, my option is worth (30 - DEC price).
So if DEC is at 29, my option is worth 1, and I break even. If DEC
decline to 25 my option is worth $5, and I'm very happy.
Note, however, that to break even I needed DEC to decline from 31 1/4
to 29.
This is different from the "short" concept. Whenever you sell
something you don't own you are said to be "short". The idea is to
sell something you don't own and then buy it back later at a lower
price. You can short a stock, hoping the value will go down allowing
you to buy it back at a lower price. You can also short options;
also known as "writing uncovered" options. If I short a DEC Feb put
I'm actually betting the the stock won't decline; i.e. I'm hoping that
the Put expires worthless, so I can keep the money I got selling the
option...
|
669.7 | Gold Investing | POSSUM::BOUCHARD | The enemy is wise | Wed Jan 26 1994 11:57 | 14 |
| re: .0
Be extremely careful. Gold prices are difficult to predict, and the
market is "self-correcting". If "most" people thought gold would rise
then there would be more bold buyers than gold sellers, increasing the
price of gold until it reached a point where buyers and sellers evened
out.
If you choose to invest in gold be aware that the futures and options
markets are extremely risky places to start. I would suggest that
somebody wanted to invest in gold select a gold mutual fund, which will
invest primarily in mining stocks. These will move more or less in
line with gold prices. You won't retire overnight, but you run much
less risk is gold falls.
|
669.8 | Now i understand... | CARROL::YOUNG | where is this place in space??? | Wed Jan 26 1994 13:42 | 5 |
| Thanks Ken for the options insight...i have a much better appreciation
now of how these work....
Thanks again
|
669.9 | | ZENDIA::FERGUSON | Red X | Wed Jan 26 1994 16:58 | 1 |
| Then there's the whole world of writing covered/uncovered puts and calls!
|
669.10 | A little 'light' reading maybe???? | CARROL::YOUNG | where is this place in space??? | Wed Jan 26 1994 17:17 | 3 |
| Well that brings up a good point...what book/s would you recommend for
Investing '201'....beyond knowing how to read the stock listings...we're
talking the ins and outs of Indexes, Options and Commodities????
|
669.11 | | BROKE::SHAH | Amitabh "Amend Constitution: ban DECAF" | Thu Jan 27 1994 09:34 | 6 |
| A basic book on options is by Michael Thompson (the 'p' may be missing)
with "Options" in the title. Of course, one of the classics is
"Options as a Strategic Investment" by Lawrence McMillan, but from
what I have heard (I haven't read it), it is beyong the basics.
Do "dir/title="book" to find a pointer to these and more.
|
669.12 | This sounds to easy... | SMURF::SWARD | Common sense is not that common | Thu Nov 09 1995 10:43 | 19 |
|
This isn't about gold but about options.
Let's assume that I have 700 shares of DEC that I would be happy to get
$60 a share for. Looking in the WSJ today I see that dec 60 puts goes
for $5. Could I sell 7 dec $60 DEC puts, covered by my shares?
What would happen? If DEC goes above $60 I get $60 a share plus what I
sold the options for (700*60+700*5), right?
If DEC is below $60 the puts will expire and I'll still have the stock
plus what I sold the options for. Should I also buy december calls,
seeing as they are traded at $1 1/8, then I would be covered if the
stock goes above $60 since I then have the right to buy at $60.
This seems like I can have my cake and eat it to...
What's wrong here?
/Peter
|
669.13 | It is too easy | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Thu Nov 09 1995 11:47 | 14 |
| > [...] Could I sell 7 dec $60 DEC puts, covered by my shares?
No. You can't sell puts "covered" by your shares. You can sell calls
covered by your shares.
A "put" option permits the buyer to SELL TO YOU at the strike price.
As a put seller you would be forced to pay $60/share for DEC, even if
It fell to $20. That's not what you want.
You probably want to look into selling calls covered by your shares.
As you have seen, they aren't -that- profitable, though there are folks
who make some pocket change selling out-of-the-money calls.
John
|
669.14 | | SMURF::SWARD | Common sense is not that common | Thu Nov 09 1995 13:12 | 11 |
|
John,
Thanks, it sounded to good and it was. I have bought calls in the
past and thought that the opposite was selling puts.. Never thought
about selling calls.
Thanks again. Maybe it's time to get to get one of those options
books..
/Peter
|
669.15 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Thu Nov 09 1995 14:29 | 9 |
| > I have bought calls in the past ....
> ....
> Maybe it's time to get to get one of those options books..
I'm surprised you were able to open an options account
without having been sent the booklet and giving your
John Handcock on the options account application that
you have read the booklet .... (the booklet says the
exchanges, at least the NYSE, requires this procedure).
|
669.16 | | SMURF::SWARD | Common sense is not that common | Thu Nov 09 1995 15:40 | 5 |
|
I did get the booklet when I opened the account 7 years ago. However,
the only options trading I ever did was buying calls.
/Peter
|
669.17 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Thu Nov 09 1995 18:57 | 1 |
| Covered calls can be an investor's best friend!
|