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Options Glossary
Bid - The highest offered price at a specified time.
Black-Scholes Model – A theoretical method of pricing
using strike price, market price, interest rates, expiration
date and other factors.
Butterfly Spread – A trading strategy consisting of the
purchase of two identical options, together with the sale of
one option with a higher strike price, and one option with an
lower strike price.
(All options are of the same type, have the same underlying
asset and the same expiration date.)
Calendar Spread – A trading strategy consisting of one
long and one short option of the same type with the same
exercise price, but which expire in different months.
Call – An options contract conferring the right to buy
an underlying asset, such as 100 shares of stock, at a pre-set
price, by a specified date.
Condor – A trading strategy consisting of the sale (or
purchase) of two options with consecutive exercise prices,
together with the sale (or purchase) of one option with a lower
exercise price and one option with a higher exercise price.
Covered Call – A trading strategy which consists of
holding a long position in an asset and selling call options on
that same asset.
Delta - A ratio comparing the change in the price of an
option to that of a change in the underlying asset.
Exercise Price – See Strike Price
Hedge – A technique of reducing risk by taking positions
which tend to move in opposite directions.
Historic Volatility – (See Volatility) Calculated by
using the standard deviation of underlying asset price changes
from close to close trading for the prior 21 days.
Holder – The buyer of an option. (See Writer)
In-the-Money - A (call/put) option is in-the-money if
the strike price is (less/more) than the market price of the
underlying security.
Intrinsic Value - The difference between the underlying
asset's price and the strike price. (For both puts and calls,
if the difference is negative, the value is given as zero.)
Naked Option - An option written (sold) without a
position in the underlying asset.
Option – A contract to buy (call) or sell (put) an
underlying asset at a pre-set price by ('American style') or on
('European style') a specified date.
Open Interest - The total number of options contracts
not closed or delivered on a given day.
Out-of-the-Money - An option whose exercise price has no
intrinsic value.
Premium - The price an option buyer pays to an option
seller.
Put - An option contract granting the right to sell an
asset at a pre-set price within a specified time.
Straddle - A trading strategy consisting of a long
(short) call and a long (short) put, in which both options have
the same strike price and expiration date.
Strangle - A trading strategy consisting of a long
(short) call and a long (short) put in which both options have
the same expiration date, but different strike prices.
Strike Price - The price at which an underlying asset
must be bought (call) or sold (put), if an option is
exercised.
Time Value - The amount by which the current market
price of a option exceeds its intrinsic value.
Volatility - A measurement of degree of change in price
over a specified period of time.
Writer - The seller of either a call or put option.
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