Option Trader One

Glossary (A-E)

Home | Glossary (A-E) | Glossary (F-P) | Glossary (Q-Z) | Contact Us
Glossary of Terms Used on this Site
A
 
Adjustments: Certain events such as a stock split or a stock dividend (e.g., a 3-for-2 stock split). An adjusted option may cover more than the usual one hundred shares. For example, after a 3-for-2 stock split, the adjusted option will represent 150 shares. For such options, the premium must be multiplied by a corresponding factor. Example: buying 1 call (covering 150 shares) at 4 would cost $600. See also Strike price interval
All-or-none order (AON): A type of option order which requires that the order be executed completely or not at all. An AON order may be either a day order or a GTC (good til cancel) order.
American-style option: An option that can be exercised at any time prior to its expiration date. See also European-style option
AMEX / ASE: American Stock Exchange.
Arbitrage: A trading technique that involves the simultaneous purchase and sale of identical assets or of equivalent assets in two different markets with the intent of profiting by the price discrepancy.
Ask / ask price: The price at which a seller, market maker, or specialist is offering to sell an option or a stock. See also Assignment
Assigned: Received notification of an assignment by The Options Clearing Corporation (OCC). See also Assignment
Assignment: Notification by The Options Clearing Corporation (OCC)to a clearing member that an owner of an option has exercised his or her rights. For equity and index options, assignments are made on a random basis by the OCC. See also Delivery and Exercise
At-The-Money: A term that describes an option with a strike price that is equal to the current market price of the underlying stock.
Averaging down: Buying more of a stock or an option at a lower price than the original purchase so as to reduce the average cost.

B
 
Backspread: A delta-neutral spread composed of more long options than short options on the same underlying instrument. This position generally profits from a large movement in either direction in the underlying instrument.
Bear (or bearish) spread: One of a variety of strategies involving two or more options (or options combined with a position in the underlying stock) that can potentially profit from a fall in the price of the underlying stock.
Bear spread (call): The simultaneous writing of one call option with a lower strike price and the purchase of another call option with a higher strike price. Example: writing 1 XYZ May 60 call, and buying 1 XYZ May 65 call.
Bear spread (put): The simultaneous purchase of one put option with a higher strike price and the writing of another put option with a lower strike price. Example: buying 1 XYZ May 60 put, and writing 1 XYZ May 55 put.
Bearish: An adjective describing the opinion that a stock, or a market in general, will decline in price -- a negative or pessimistic outlook.
Beta: A measure of how closely the movement of an individual stock tracks the movement of the entire stock market.
Bid / Bid Price: The best or highest price at which a buyer, market maker, or specialist is offering to buy an option or a stock.
Black-Scholes formula: The first widely-used model for option pricing. This formula can be used to calculate a theoretical value for an option using current stock prices, expected dividends, the option's strike price, expected interest rates, time to expiration and expected stock volatility. While the Black-Scholes model does not perfectly describe real-world options markets, it is still often used in the valuation and trading of options.
BOX: Boston Options Exchange Group L.L.C.
Box spread: A four-sided option spread that involves a long call and a short put at one strike price as well as a short call and a long put at another strike price. Example: buying 1 XYZ May 60 call, and writing 1 XYZ May 65 call; simultaneously buying 1 XYZ May 65 put, and writing 1 May 60 put.
Break-even point(s): The stock price(s) at which an option strategy results in neither a profit nor a loss. While a strategy's break-even point(s) are normally stated as of the option's expiration date, a theoretical option pricing model can be used to determine the strategy's break-even point(s) for other dates as well.
Broke: A person acting as an agent for making securities transactions. An 'Account Executive' or a 'broker' at a brokerage firm deals directly with customers. A 'Floor Broker' on the trading floor of an exchange actually executes someone else's trading orders. 
Bull (or bullish) spread: One of a variety of strategies involving two or more options (or options combined with an underlying stock position) that may potentially profit from a rise in the price of the underlying stock.
Bull spread (call): The simultaneous purchase of one call option with a lower strike price and the writing of another call option with a higher strike price. Example: buying 1 XYZ May 60 call, and writing 1 XYZ May 65 call.
Bull spread (put): The simultaneous writing of one put option with a higher strike price and the purchase of another put option with a lower strike price. Example: writing 1 XYZ May 60 put, and buying 1 XYZ May 55 put.
Bullish: An adjective describing the opinion that a stock, or the market in general, will rise in price -- a positive or optimistic outlook.
Butterfly spread: A strategy involving three strike prices that has both limited risk and limited profit potential. A long call butterfly is established by: buying one call at the lowest strike price, writing two calls at the middle strike price, and buying one call at the highest strike price. A long put butterfly is established by: buying one put at the highest strike price, writing two puts at the middle strike price, and buying one put at the lowest strike price. For example, a long call butterfly might be: buying 1 XYZ May 55 call, writing 2 XYZ May 60 calls and buying 1 XYZ May 65 call.
Buy-write: A covered call position in which stock is purchased and an equivalent number of calls written at the same time. This position may be transacted as a combined order, with both sides (buying stock and writing calls) being executed simultaneously. Example: buying 500 shares XYZ stock, and writing 5 XYZ May 60 calls. See also Covered call / covered call writing

C
Calendar spread: An option strategy which generally involves the purchase of a farther-term option (call or put) and the writing of an equal number of nearer-term options of the same type and strike price. Example: buying 1 XYZ May 60 call (far-term portion of the spread) and writing 1 XYZ March 60 call (near-term portion of the spread). See also Horizontal spread
Call / call option: An option contract that gives the owner the right to buy the underlying security at a specified price (its strike price) for a certain, fixed period of time (until its expiration). For the writer of a call option, the contract represents an obligation to sell the underlying security if the option is assigned. The buyer pays a fee (called a premium) for this right.
Carry / carrying cost: The interest expense on money borrowed to finance a securities position.
Cash settlement amount: The difference between the exercise price of the option being exercised and the exercise settlement value of the index on the day the index option is exercised. See also Exercise settlement amount
CBOE: The Chicago Board Options Exchange.
Class of options: A term referring to all options of the same type -- either calls or puts -- covering the same underlying stock.
Close: A reduction or an elimination of an open position by the appropriate offsetting purchase or sale. An existing long option position is closed by a selling transaction. An existing short option position is closed by a purchase transaction. This transaction will reduce the open interest for the specific option involved.
Closing price: The final price of a security at which a transaction was made. See also Settlement price
Closing transaction: A reduction or an elimination of an open position by the appropriate offsetting purchase or sale. An existing long option position is closed by a selling transaction. An existing short option position is closed by a purchase transaction. This transaction will reduce the open interest for the specific option involved.
Collar: A protective strategy in which a written call and a long put are taken against a previously owned long stock position. The options may have the same strike price or different strike prices and the expiration months may or may not be the same. For example, if the investor previously purchased XYZ Corporation at $46 and it rose to $62, a 'collar' involving the purchase of a May 60 put and the writing of a May 65 call could be established as a way of protecting some of the unrealized profit in the XYZ Corporation stock position. The reverse -- a long call combined with a written put -- might also be used if the investor has previously established a short stock position in XYZ Corporation. See also Fence
Collateral: Securities against which loans are made. If the value of the securities (relative to the loan) declines to an unacceptable level, this triggers a margin call. As such, the investor is asked to post additional collateral or the securities are sold to repay the loan.
Combination: A trading position involving out-of-the-money puts and calls on a one-to-one basis. The puts and calls have different strike prices, but the same expiration and underlying stock. A long combination is when both options are owned, and a short combination is when both options are written. Example: a long combination might be buying 1 XYZ May 60 call, and buying 1 XYZ May 55 put.
Condor spread: A strategy involving four strike prices that has both limited risk and limited profit potential. A long call condor spread is established by buying one call at the lowest strike, writing one call at the second strike, writing another call at the third strike, and buying one call at the fourth (highest) strike. This spread is also referred to as a 'flat-top butterfly.'
Contingency order: An order to execute a transaction in one security that depends on the price of another security. An example might be: 'Sell the XYZ May 60 call at 2, contingent upon XYZ stock being at or below $59 1/2.'
Contract size:The amount of the underlying asset covered by the option contract. This is 100 shares for one equity option unless adjusted for a special event, such as a stock split or a stock dividend, or otherwise special by the listing exchange.
Conversion:An investment strategy in which a long put and a short call with the same strike price and expiration are combined with long stock to lock in a nearly riskless profit. For example, buying 100 shares of XYZ stock, writing 1 XYZ May 60 call, and buying 1 XYZ May 60 put at desirable prices. The process of executing these three-sided trades is sometimes called 'conversion arbitrage.' See also Reversal / reverse conversion
Cover: To close out an open position. This term is used most frequently to describe the purchase of an option or stock to close out an existing short position for either a profit or loss.
Covered call / covered call writing: An option strategy in which a call option is written (sold) against an equivalent amount of long stock. Example: writing 2 XYZ May 60 calls while owning 200 shares or more of XYZ stock. See also Buy-write and Overwrite
Covered combination: A strategy in which one call and one put with the same expiration, but different strike prices, are written against each 100 shares of the underlying stock. Example: writing 1 XYZ May 60 call and 1 XYZ May 65 put, and buying 100 shares of XYZ stock. In actuality, this is not a fully 'covered' strategy because assignment on the short put would require purchase of additional stock.
Covered / covered option: A short option position that is fully offset by the underlying security or an offsetting long option position. A covered call could be offset by long stock or a long call with a lower strike price than the short call, while a covered put could be offset by short stock or a long put with a higher strike price than the short put. This insures that if the owner of the short option exercises, the writer of the option will not have a problem fulfilling the delivery requirements. See also Uncovered call option writing and Uncovered put option writing
Covered put / Covered cash-secured put: Cash secured put is an option stategy in which a put option is written against a sufficient amount of cash (or T-bills to pay for the stock purchase if the short option is assigned).
Covered straddle: An option strategy in which one call and one put with the same strike price and expiration are written against each 100 shares of the underlying stock. Example: writing 1 XYZ May 60 call and 1 XYZ May 60 put, and buying 100 shares of XYZ stock. In actuality, this is not a fully 'covered' strategy because assignment on the short put would require purchase of additional stock.
Cramer (Cramer Effect): James (Jim) J. Cramer is a director and co-founder of TheStreet.com. He contributes daily market commentary to TheStreet.com's websites. He is also the host of CNBC's "Mad Money" and CBS' RealMoney Radio With Jim Cramer. The Cramer effect is a term for the temporary market impact he usually generates when he recommends a stock for purchase or sale.
Credit: Money received in an account either from a deposit or a transaction that results in increasing the account's cash balance.
Credit spread: A spread strategy that increases the account's cash balance when it is established. A bull spread with puts and a bear spread with calls are examples of credit spreads.
Curvature: A measure of the rate of change in an option's delta for a one-unit change in the price of the underlying stock. See also Delta
Cycle: The expiration dates applicable to the different series of options. Traditionally, there were three cycles:
Cycle ----- Available expiration months
January---- January / April / July / October
February -- February / May / August / November
March ----- March / June / September / December
Today, equity options expire on a hybrid cycle which involves a total of four option series: the two nearest-term calendar months and the next two months from the traditional cycle to which that class of options has been assigned. For example, on January 1, a stock in the January cycle will be trading options expiring in these months: January, February, April, and July. After the January expiration, the months outstanding will be February, March, April and July.

D
 
Day order: A type of option order which instructs the broker to cancel any unfilled portion of the order at the close of trading on the day the order is first entered.
Day trade: A position (stock or option) that is opened and closed on the same day.
Debit: Money paid out from an account either from a withdrawal or a transaction that results in decreasing the cash balance.
Debit spread: A spread strategy that decreases the account's cash balance when it is established. A bull spread with calls and a bear spread with puts are examples of debit spreads.
Decay: A term used to describe how the theoretical value of an option 'erodes' or reduces with the passage of time. Time decay is specifically quantified by theta.
Delivery: The process of meeting the terms of a written option contract when notification of assignment has been received. In the case of a short equity call, the writer must deliver the underlying security and in return receives cash for the stock sold. In the case of a short equity put, the writer pays cash and in return receives the underlying security.
Delta: A measure of the rate of change in an option's theoretical value (in pennies) for a one-dollar change in the price of the underlying stock. An option with a delta of 0.30, sometimes called delta 30, will rise or fall by $0.30 for a $1.00 rise or fall in the underlying stock.
Delta long / delta positive: A calculation on a specific stock and its derivative options in one portfolio such that the total value of that stock-combined-derivative postion will increase if the underlying stock increases in price and vice versa.
Delta neutral: A calculation on a specific stock and its derivative options in one portfolio such that the total value of that stock-combined-derivative postion will neither increase nor decrease if the underlying stock increases or decreases in price by relatively small percentages.
Delta short / delta negative: A calculation on a specific stock and its derivative options in one portfolio such that the total value of that stock-combined-derivative postion will increase if the underlying stock decreases in price and vice versa.
Derivative / derivative security: A financial security whose value is determined in part from the value and characteristics of another security, the underlying security.
Diagonal spread: A strategy involving the simultaneous purchase and writing of two options of the same type that have different strike prices and different expiration dates. Example: buying 1 May 60 call and writing 1 March 65 call.
Discount: An adjective used to describe an option that is trading at a price less than its intrinsic value (i.e., trading below parity).
Discretion: Freedom given by an investor through his or her Account Executive to use judgment regarding the execution of an order. Discretion can be limited, as in the case of a limit order which gives the Floor Broker 1/8 or 1/4 point from the stated limit price to use his or her judgment in executing the order. Discretion can also be unlimited, as in the case of a market-not-held-order.

E
 
Early exercise:A feature of American-style options that allows the owner to exercise an option at any time prior to its expiration date.
Equity: In a margin account, this is the difference between the securities owned and the margin loans owed. It is the amount the investor would keep after all positions have been closed and all margin loans paid off.
Equity option: An option on shares of an individual common stock or exchange traded fund.
Equivalent strategy: A strategy which has the same risk-reward profile as another strategy. For example, a long May 60-65 call vertical spread is equivalent to a short May 60-65 put vertical spread. See also Synthetic position
European-style option : An option that can be exercised only during a specified period of time just prior to its expiration. See also American-style option
Ex-date / ex-dividend date: The day before which an investor must have purchased the stock in order to receive the dividend. On the ex-dividend date, the previous day's closing price is reduced by the amount of the dividend (rounded up to the nearest eighth) because purchasers of the stock on the ex-dividend date will not receive the dividend payment. This date is sometimes referred to simply as the 'ex-date,' and can apply to other situations; for example, splits and distributions. If you purchase a stock on the ex-date for a split or distribution you are not entitled to the split stock or that distribution. However, the opening price for the stock will have been reduced by an appropriate amount, as on the ex-dividend date. Weekly financial publications, such as Barron's, often include a stock's upcoming 'ex-date' as part of their stock tables.
Exchange traded funds (ETFs): Exchange traded funds (ETFs) are index funds or trusts that are listed on an exchange and can be traded in a similar fashion as a single equity. The first ETF came about in 1993 with the AMEX's concept of a tradable basket of stocks -- the Standard & Poor's Depositary Receipt (SPDR). Today, the number of ETFs that trade options continues to grow and diversify. Investors can buy or sell shares in the collective performance of an entire stock portfolio - or a bond portfolio -- as a single security. Exchange traded funds allow some of the more favorable features of stock trading, such as liquidity and ease of equity style features to more traditional index investing.
Exercise: To invoke the rights granted to the owner of an option contract. In the case of a call, the option owner buys the underlying security. In the case of a put, the option owner sells the underlying security.
Exercise by exception processing: A procedure used by The Options Clearing Corporation as an operational convenience for it's clearing members. Under these proceedings, a clearing member is deeming to have tendered exercise notices for options that are in-the-money by threshold amounts, unless specifically instructed not to do so. This procedure protects the owner from losing the intrinsic value of the option because of failure to exercise. Unless instructed not to do so, all expiring equity options that are held in customer accounts will be exercised if they are in the money by a specified amount.
Exercise price: The price at which the owner of an option can purchase (call) or sell (put) the underlying security. Used interchangeably with strike and strike price.
Exercise settlement amount: The difference between the exercise price of the option being exercised and the exercise settlement value of the index on the day the index option is exercised.
Expiration cycle: The expiration dates applicable to the different series of options. Traditionally, there were three cycles:
Cycle ---- Available expiration months
January--- January / April / July / October
February-- February / May / August / November
March ---- March / June / September / December
Today, equity options expire on a hybrid cycle which involves a total of four option series: the two nearest-term calendar months and the next two months from the traditional cycle to which that class of options has been assigned. For example, on January 1, a stock in the January cycle will be trading options expiring in these months: January, February, April, and July. After the January expiration, the months outstanding will be February, March, April and July.
Expiration / expiration date: The date on which an option and the right to exercise it cease to exist.
Expiration Friday: The last business day prior to the option's expiration date during which purchases and sales of options can be made. For equity options, this is generally the third Friday of the expiration month. Note: If the third Friday of the month is an exchange holiday, the last trading day will be the Thursday immediately preceding the third Friday.
Expiration month: The month during which the expiration date occurs.
Expiry: Expiration, i.e, the date on which an option and the right to exercise it cease to exist.

Pafumi Asset Management Company -- Phone: (845) 356-2540;   Fax: (646) 365-1288

              Copyright © 2009 Pafumi Asset Management Co.  All rights reserved.