4.1.1. Simple Options: Puts and Calls
Imagine that Google stock is currently trading at $800 and you believe that it is going to rise quickly in the near term. Maybe you think it will climb to $850 within the month. You would like to buy shares in Google and profit from your belief that the price will rise, but you don’t want to commit to the whole price of the stock at this time.
Instead of buying shares of the stock, you could buy a Google call option, which will give you the right to buy a set number of shares in the future at a specific price. This price is called the strike price. You will have to pay a small amount of money, called a premium, for this right, however.
This call option will give you the right to buy 100 Google shares at the strike price, regardless of how high the market price of Google rises.
Options usually only last for a few months, however. What happens if Google stock doesn’t rise above the strike price? Then the option will expire, and you will lose what you paid for the option (the premium).
For every option that has a buyer, there is also a seller. The seller will receive the money that you paid for the option (the premium), but he obligates himself to deliver the stock to you if you decide to exercise the call option and buy the security. The seller of a call option has an obligation to sell at the strike price. So the seller of the call is hoping that the price of Google will not rise. If the stock price rises high enough, he will lose money.
When an investor purchases an option, we say he is “long the option,” or he is the “holder of the option.” When an investor sells an option, we say that he is “short the option,” or he “writes an option.”
If you believe that the price of Google will fall quickly, you could buy a put option. Holding a put option gives you the right to sell 100 shares of Google at a strike price. If you are long a Google put option, you have the right to sell 100 share