How NOT To Get Hurt With Options

How NOT To Get Hurt With Options

Options can be used to provide extra income, allow you to profit in every different market trend, and protect the money you already have. Options can be used to smooth out your returns, protect you in a down market and insure against the risk of catastrophic loss in your portfolio. With all these amazing abilities, why are options so often vilified as being unsafe and risky? The truth is that options can be very dangerous if used incorrectly. The problem is not necessarily with the options themselves, but with the trouble they allow you to get into if you don’t understand the nature of the risk.

To illustrate the problem, let’s compare two similar trades. The married put and the long call. At the time I write this, Disney (DIS) is trading for $92.45 per share. Disney has earnings on November 11. If I want to get into the stock, but worry about a possible large move to the downside, I can buy the stock and a December strike 90 put for 1.82. That strategy would increase my cost basis, but also limit my loss to the downside. It would also leave open the possibility of unlimited gains to the upside. If I buy 100 shares of stock and one contract of the puts, my total debit is the cost of the stock plus the cost of the put: $9,427. However, my risk is the total cost minus the strike of the put: in this case, $427. I have preserved my ability to participate with Disney if it rises, and greatly reduced my downside risk. So far, so good.

I could accomplish a very similar result by purchasing a long call in the same month and strike price. As I write this, the December strike 90 call costs $4.15. One contract would set me back $415 and that would be my total risk. As with the married put strategy, the call would also allow me to participate in the unlimited upside potential should Disney climb higher. At first glance, these appear to be nearly the same trade with very similar risk and reward.

The problem is not with the options, but with the way they are treated by the broker. This is easiest to see in a cash account like an IRA. In the married put version of the trade, the broker will hold the entire cost of the stock and option aside, and that money is unavailable for other trades. In other words, although the total risk to the portfolio is $425, $9427 will be unavailable for trading. The person with a $10,000 account would only be able to do one of these trades. However, with the long call version, the broker will only hold back the cost of the call. In the same $10,000 account, you could do 24 of these trades. This exposes the account to incredible risk as the chance of the long call losing all of its value is quite high. That may not be a problem when the loss is limited to $415, but it is a disaster for an account filled with these trades.

Most traders are wise enough not to fill their entire portfolios with long calls on a single stock. However, I have seen people endanger themselves by placing options trades on several different equities in the mistaken belief that they are protected by diversification. The problem is that when the entire market falls, all of the options trades, on all the different equities could be wiped out. The solution is not to avoid options and all the benefits they can provide. Instead, you must have a realistic view of the total risk in your portfolio as a whole, and not just the risk in each individual trade. Moreover, you need a good understanding, not only of the amount of risk but the probability of that risk materializing. It is very difficult to lose 100% percent of the money you invest in an equity. For that to happen, the company would have to go bankrupt. On the other hand, it is relatively easy to lose 100% percent of the money in a long call. Each different trade structure has its own probability of loss and must be assessed for the risk it contributes to your portfolio. In level 6 of our program, we teach portfolio management and ask students to think about these important issues. Once you understand how options work, their benefits and their risks, you will be much better able to use them to your advantage and avoid the pitfalls.

Jodie Lane
OptionsANIMAL Instructor

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I've been an Options Animal member / student for a bit over a year now and am incredibly impressed with the organization, their depth of knowledge, their teaching methods and their support of their students. In fact, I just signed up for life time membership so that I can continue to make use of the resource for the rest of my trading career.Before becoming a student of O/A I had been studying options trading technique on my own, attending webinars buying books from Amazon & etc. for about three years and not doing very well at it. I was also trading equities as I had been for the past 17 years and my portfolios were increasing in value from my efforts but not by leaps and bounds. In fact I was just covering living expenses plus a little bit and looking for a way to become a more successful trader; hence my foray into options.Joining Options Animal was like stumbling out of the woods and into the sunshine. "Don't try to trade options until the end of the course when you will have learned how to do it." was their first piece of advice. ( Wish I'd had that tattooed on my wrist three years ago. It would have saved me a bundle.) Next piece of advice: "If you do experiment with trading options just count the results as increased tuition costs." (Yeah, I had to learn that the hard way.)Then they proceeded to a very detailed analysis of markets / equity trading with instructions on where to find the real information for fundamental analysis. This alone resulted in a measurable improvement in my efforts at equity trading. After that it was straight into options, "the Greeks" & etc.What makes the O/A teaching method a cut above anything else, in my opinion, is that there are four primary instructors all from different backgrounds who each teach all the lessons in the curriculum. All of their efforts are recorded in the O/A archives which gives the student the ability to gain exposure to the same material from four different perspectives. And because the instructors are continually presenting the material over time one can gain a better understanding from listening to the same person giving the same talk but in a slightly different way.Any points not clearly understood can be repeated instantly or reviewed in its entirety later. Students can also interact with the instructors in real time during the scheduled sessions or attend the weekly open forums to cover specifics and have additional questions answered. One is not locked into a rigid class schedule which is going to move forward whether the student understands the presented material or not.In addition there is a bulletin board / chat room organized by courses and lessons and related subjects where students and interact and learn techniques from each other and the participating instructors.Long story short: if you really want to improve your trading to the point where your success rate is above the ninety percentile point then Options Animal is what you've been looking for.
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