...This gets frustrating there must be a laymans explanation to remember what each of the following do. I thought i did and just when i read to educate a bit more i get confused again. Could someone put me right?...
This is the same info as both Potato and Wayne have stated - just set out a bit differently to see if it might help
Sell Call option Means: receive the premium to sell stock you own ( if Covered call) at a agreed price at or before an expiration date. If don't own then must have it if assigned. You have the obligation
Yes, you've got it and the call seller has the obligation to SELL the stock if assigned. If you already own it, it's simple - assignment automatically sells your shares covered by that option
If the call seller is assigned and doesn't already own it, then they will find they are short shares in your account. Some brokers do not allow naked calls due to the risk.
So, either way, if assigned on a sold call option you are obligated to sell the relevant stock whether you own it or not.
(Sold put option is the same concept as the sold call option in that you will have to buy stock if assigned. IOW, the put seller is selling the put buyer insurance)
Buy Put option you pay a premium to someone else to buy a stock at a particular price at some time in the future. They have the obligation
Yes, again you have it. You are paying the put seller to take the downside risk (eg insurance). And they have the obligation to buy the stock if assigned.
Alternatively, as the option buyer, you have the right to exercise your stock and sell it at the put strike price.
(Buying a call option is the same concept as puts. The buyer has limited risk and the seller takes the remainder of that risk.)
In general terms:
Option buyers have rights and usually limited risks.
Option sellers have obligations and takes the risk for the option buyer.
I get myself confused in the case say of a PUT i understand if i BUY a PUT i want to insure myself so i pay the premium incase the stock tumbles so i can sell at a set price
Then i lose it when it comes to SELL a PUT i would think i receive the premium and?????
Yes, you understand the put buying concept.
Selling a put - let me finish your sentence: ...receive the premium and
(1) keep the premium if not assigned AND the market expires ABOVE your strike price
(2) obligated to buy the stock if assigned
(3) Can always close the position before expiry by buying the option you sold (unless assigned first).
In a nutshell:
Buying puts or calls means paying a premium which is the price paid in return for limiting risk.
Buying calls is usually best in strongly bullish conditions.
Buying puts is usually best in strongly bearish conditions.
Selling puts or calls means receiving premium in return for taking on the risk (you are taking the risk that the buyer wants to limit).
Selling calls is usually best in bearish to neutral conditions.
Selling puts is usually best in bullish to neutral conditions.
There are other risks attached to sold options such as dividends and other special circumstances - won't complicate things further at this stage - but just to point out that there are other mitigating factors to learn down the track...
- Written in haste - I'm sure Wayne will pick up any mistakes