Usar "put option" en una oración
put option oraciones de ejemplo
put option
1. option and a put option at the same strike price and with the
2. hold the stock (in the case of a put option), you must ensure
3. The writers of put options are required to
4. The writer of a put option, on being assigned, will be required
5. received when the put option was written
6. PVH is an excellent example of a put options trading for profit that is
7. The File Formats tab configures output options
8. finance are the purchase (call option) or sale (put option) of an asset
9. I check on the price of put options
10. That’s because put options are like insurance, and in this case, people are betting the price will be steady or higher
11. I have thirty-two thousand dollars in cash in my trading account, and I use it all to buy the put options
12. This was consistent with a rise in put option buying (by investors betting on further market declines) in the options markets, which also became evident at the time
13. The purchase of a call option can be seen as a bet that a stock will rise in price, whereas the purchase of a put option can be seen as a bet on a price decline
14. If you think it’s going lower, you can buy VIX put options
15. Customer transactions, meanwhile, are often thought to best represent market sentiment because customers, which include individual investors, often buy call and put options to express their sentiment toward a particular stock
16. Near-the-money call/put options, 34–35
17. If the put option sold expires in-the-money (ITM), the option seller will have to buy XYZ stock for $90 from the put option owner
18. Equity loss offset by theoretical gain in put options of $3,950
19. When the market price is greater than the strike price in a put option, it’s out-of-the-money
20. Put options: Putting everything on the line
21. A put option is the exact opposite of a call option because it gives you the right, but not the obligation, to sell a security at some point in the future for a predetermined price
22. When you think the price of a security is going down, you want to use a put option to try to take advantage of this price movement
23. A call option is the opposite of a put option
24. put option: In the futures markets, a put option gives the holder the right but not the obligation to sell a security at a predetermined price at a specific point in the future
25. A put option is the opposite of a call option
26. A strategy in which you buy a put option on a stock which you already own (or buy at the same time as the put) is known as a married put
27. In this strategy, you would buy put options at a certain strike price and then sell the same number of puts at a lower strike price, both on the same underlying stock with the same expiration date
28. In this strategy, you would purchase (or sell) both a call option and a put option on a stock with the same strike price and the same expiration date
29. In this strategy, the investor sells an out-of-the-money put option, buys another out-of-the money put option with a lower strike price, sells an out-of-the-money call option, and buys another out-of-the-money call option at a higher strike price
30. In this strategy, the investor purchases an out-of-the money put option while at the same time writing an out-of-the-money call option on the same stock with the same expiration date
31. In the strangle strategy, the investor buys both a put option and a call option, both usually out-of-the-money, on the same stock with the same expiration date, but with different strike prices
32. A put option is in-the-money if the strike price is greater than the market price of the underlying security
33. A put option is out-of-the-money if the strike price is less than the market price of the underlying security
34. One might be the stock owner who buys put options as a form of insurance
35. It created some of our best option trading opportunities as we purchased cattle put options in April and used “Neutral Option Positions” in the summer of 1994 to capture the high option premium
36. straddle: buying simultaneously a buy and a put option in a share with the same exercise price and expiry date; a technique in options trading used by investors who expect volatility in the price of the underlying shares, it widens the break-even point but means they can make money if there is a substantial movement in either direction
37. He will commit a portion of his funds to buying put options on a stock index, to hedge against a broad decline in the market
38. Let’s reference two past examples: first, the three-year bear market that began in April of 2000 and ended in April 2003 would have given you a great opportunity to use put options as a way to invest in a down market
39. When you purchase call or put options and the underlying stock moves in the direction you need it to, you still can lose money if it doesn’t move far enough in the right direction
40. As you read on, keep in mind that a strike price is your chosen price at which you agree to trade an option whether it is a call or put option for a short-term current expiration or long-term, two-year expiration
41. If that was the case and you were looking to purchase a call option to profit from an upward move or a put option to profit on a down move, then you wouldn’t trade the current January option because there isn’t enough time for the stock to move without risking the cost of the option
42. As a guideline, when purchasing call or put options, I always consider purchasing an option that has three or more months of time before its expiration date
43. 6 to learn intrinsic value for a put option
44. The intrinsic value for the $115 put option is $5
45. The reverse effect applies when looking at the put option example; as the stock value drops, your intrinsic value will increase and as the stock price increases, your intrinsic value will drop
46. Now, as you look at the chart, you’ll see number one represents the call options, and number two represents the put options
47. With other advanced option strategies, you could lose more than your original investment but not when you purchase call or put options
48. I’m going to share with you how the same terms “in-the-money”, “at-the-money”, and “out-of-the-money” work when trading the market to the downside and using the purchase of put options to benefit as stocks drop in value
49. The concept is the same as call options except the visual is opposite; when the actual price of the stock is below your chosen strike price for a put option, your option is in-the-money instead of out-of-the-money
50. When looking at a put option (Figure 2