Net Option Premium

  

Some option strategies involve multiple legs. That means you are simultaneously buying and selling different options, either to set up a series of hedges or to profit from a highly specific scenario.

The net option premium measures the profit or cost that setting up that series of options generates. Take the total gain of all the options you sold (minus commissions) and subtract the total cost of all the options you bought (minus commissions). A positive number means you earned money from setting up the options strategy. A negative number means you spent money (though you still might profit later if your options pay off).

You're an options trader. You buy 10 calls for candy-maker Big Sugar Slow Munchies Inc., costing you $5. Meanwhile, you sell 5 puts for the same strike price for Big Sugar, each grossing you $3. So you paid $50 for your calls, but earned $15 for selling the puts. That series of transactions leads to a net option premium of negative $35. You paid $50, but brought in $15. On a net basis, it cost you $35 to set up those deals.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What are stock options in 90 se...0 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop what are stock options in ninety seconds

00:05

or less Here's a stock ibm not the tech company

00:11

This one makes an anti constipation drug It's trading at

00:14

one hundred eighty bucks a share Okay so here's an

00:16

option of buy a share of ibm anytime in roughly

00:19

the next three months For one hundred ninety dollars a

00:21

share it's called a call option If you really believe

00:24

the ibm will go to say two hundred dollars a

00:26

share in the next three months well you'd be what's

00:28

called ten dollars in the money then or then have

00:31

a stock option or call option with a strike price

00:34

of one hundred ninety dollars which would then have intrinsic

00:37

value of ten bucks a share On the other end

00:39

of the buy sell desk is the gal willing to

00:42

sell you that call option for three bucks Three bucks

00:45

a premium So gut check time Would you pay three

00:49

dollars for the right to buy a share if ibm

00:52

for ten dollars higher than where the stock's trading now

00:55

today Meaning that to break even in the next three

00:58

months the stock has to trade all the way up

01:00

from one hundred eighty dollars a share to one hundred

01:02

ninety three dollars a share jobs for you to get

01:04

your money back but it goes to two hundred two

01:06

share Well if you sell that option you'll have invested

01:09

three bucks a share for a net return of seven

01:11

bucks in just three months or less And yes we're

01:14

ignoring commissions and taxes here because well in problems like

01:17

this or just a in the book but three dollars

01:19

into seven only three months Yeah that's a great score

01:21

You'd have more than doubled your money And on an

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annualized return basis that's over a nine hundred percent dish

01:27

return really good score but with a much more likely

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case that you spend three bucks to buy the option

01:32

and it expires totally worthless And then you've lost your

01:35

entire investment in that option So that's a call option

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It's evil twin is a put option So whereas a

01:41

call options the rightto by a security to set price

01:45

by a certain set date a put option is the

01:47

right to sell that option We'd go into more detail

01:49

here but we're promised ninety seconds

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