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How To Read Options
Listings
Options price listings vary in appearance from site to site,
but most will contain the following basic information. Here's a
breakdown of what they list and what it means.
Shown below is one line from such a chart:
GOOG
C Jun 400 27.80 27.90 27.85 .05 138 3
GOOG (above the line) indicates the company's stock symbol, in
this case Google.
Column 1 identifies the type of option, whether a Call or a
Put.
A Call is a contract granting the right to buy the underlying
asset at a set price, a Put to sell at a set price - called the
Strike Price. There are more exotic types of options (they're
actually called 'exotics'), such as a 'chooser'. A chooser
allows the investor to choose which type of option the contract
will become at some point prior to expiration.
Column 2 shows the month during which the option contract will
expire.
All options have an expiration date, by or on which the
contract must be settled. The option at that point is either
exercised by buying/selling the underlying asset, or simply
losing the premium - the cost of the option.
All US options effectively expire on the third Friday of the
listed month. So for example, in 2006, a June option would
expire on June 16. This is the last day on which an investor
can take an action, such as trading the contract or exercising
the option.
Column 3 shows the Strike Price, which is the price at which
the underlying asset would have to be bought or sold if
exercising the option.
Column 4 states the Bid, the price a potential buyer is willing
to pay for the option contract. Note this is the premium for
the option, not the price of the underlying stock.
Column 5 states the Ask, the price at which an investor is
willing to sell.
Column 6 shows the Last Sale, which lists the amount the option
last sold at.
Column 7 lists the Net (or Change), the net change in price
over the previous sale. (Charting the Net, obviously, is one
basic aid in determining trends.)
Column 8 displays the Open Interest. Open interest is the total
number of options open. Since options have an expiration date
in the future, at a given time there are a set number of
un-exercised options contracts outstanding. If today's date
were April 1, a certain number of options Call contracts for
June Google (GOOG) would be open.
The number can change without expiration since, unlike stock
shares, new contracts can be written. True, new shares can be
floated, but that's a longer term process. Some charts will
show the total Open Interest summing a number of expiration
dates. This number is frequently charted to form part of a
trading strategy. Statistical studies show that the amount of
Open Interest correlates with price changes. Exactly how, as
with any technical analysis, is a matter of ongoing debate.
Column 9 shows the current volume of trades for the day.
Some listings will show the stock or options symbol for a
company, such as GOOG (Google stock symbol) or GOOGPNT (Google
Put option). Some will also include a -E, for example, or other
letter to indicate the exchange - such as, the CBOE (Chicago
Board of Exchange), or CME (Chicago Mercantile Exchange).
Keep in mind when calculating the amount of your investment
that options contracts are typically for 100 shares. I.e. one
option contract is an option on 100 shares. So, a June option
on GOOG listed for 27.80 would cost $2,780 (excluding
commission).
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