... What stops a person from buying the options at $3.50 exercise price then immediately exercising them and selling them at the current price of $5? ...
Second question sort of spins off the first one, Sometimes I've seen call options that have a much lower exercise price than the current share price. What stops a person from buying the options at $3.50 exercise price then immediately exercising them and selling them at the current price of $5?
As options are a contract there is, in theory, no limit to the number of contracts you can buy or sell. However, as with all contracts you need a counterparty to deal with, IOW someone willing to open the contracts with you or sell you existing contracts.Hi there,
I've gained a good understanding of the theory behind Options but I've got a few outstanding issues that I would really like some help with.
Firstly, is there a metric that says how many options of a particular option code are available to purchase? I'm finding option codes in the search on the asx website and noting the bid, offer and all the other statistics but I'm trying to figure out how to determine that if I put an order for say, $500 on a particular option code, for example FMGLI9, that the order will pretty much go through guaranteed or if I have to check somewhere whether or not they are available to buy.
Second question sort of spins off the first one, Sometimes I've seen call options that have a much lower exercise price than the current share price. What stops a person from buying the options at $3.50 exercise price then immediately exercising them and selling them at the current price of $5?
Lastly, I'll be using Etrade to buy options once I'm confident. When I'm placing an order, is the net debit just the option price times how many options I want to buy?
Thanks very much for your help I do appreciate it.
Thanks wayneL and Village I do appreciate the help.
I'm guessing from what i'm reading that actually exercising the option is not often a part of ones trading strategy?
Well I'd most of all like to learn about leverage. You see I have about $15,000 in savings but my wife would murder me if I risked it all in the markets. I have about $1000 to work with instead. I was thinking that rather than buy $1000 worth of an underlying security I could buy $1000 worth of call options. If I have the option to buy lets say, 1500 of the product at 10 per share and the price has risen to $15 before the expiry date I could rationalize using the $15,000 to exercise the options because it's a sure thing.
Would this work or are Options structured in a way where just selling them again rather than exercising them would result in the same or better profits by that point?
if you actually wanted to keep the shares, and the options were deep in the money near expiry, it would be appropriate to exercise the options.
If you didnt actually want the shares, you just wanted the profit so you would have to sell the shares again to realise it, you would probably be better off selling the option for what you could get ( intrinsic value less market makers profit), as the costs to exercise then resell would probably outweigh the mm spread.
disclaimer; nothing in these replies should be taken as encouragement to buy $1000 worth of options with the expectation of them becoming worth $7000. especially with money the missus is going to give you grief over.
I do have one more question. An example for this could be the option FMGXB8.
The bid and offer are .135 and .145 respectively.
Is this per share? or per option i.e per 100 shares? Thanks for that.
Yeah mate it's okay I won't do anything too risky. I'd never hear the end of it if I lost the $1000.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?