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Advanced Investing
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How to Energize Your Stock Portfolio
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For establishing a strategy that tempers potential losses in a bear market, the investment community preaches the same thing that the real estate market preaches for buying a house: "location, location, location". advertisement
Everyone is looking for an edge to either boost or protect their portfolios, and stock investors are no different. In this section, we discuss a technique called covered-call writing that involves selling a call option on stock that you own. A call is an option that gives the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to purchase a fixed quantity (usually 100 shares) of an equity at a fixed price (the strike price), on or before a specified date (the expiration date). The call seller or writer, on the other hand, incurs the obligation to sell 100 shares of the underlying stock at the strike price at any time the call buyer wishes to exercise their rights prior to the expiration date. Those unfamiliar with the world of options are often quick to dismiss all options trading strategies as too risky, too aggressive, or simply too rich for their blood. What these skeptics don't often recognize is that some option strategies can be used in a conservative way to protect against short-term declines in the market. By hedging an existing stock position with options, it is often far easier to weather the downside in one's portfolio. Such is the case with covered calls. What is a Covered Call? Simply stated, covered-call writing involves selling one call option for every 100 shares of stock that you own. The writer of the call options receives income from the buyer in the form of the option's premium. In exchange for the premium received, the seller of the call takes on the obligation to deliver the shares to the call buyer at the strike price in the event the shares are called away from the call seller. Covered calls accomplish two purposes. The desire to lower one's risk is generally the primary objective of the covered-call strategy. In effect, selling a covered call reduces the ultimate cost of maintaining an equity in one's portfolio. In other words, the downside risk of owning the underlying stock can be reduced since the premium received from the call side acts as a cushion for the underlying stock's downside movement. For example, selling a 100-strike call for $10 on a stock trading at 100 reduces the stock's effective cost by 10 points to 90, and thus reduces the negative impact of a decline in the share price. The second objective is to efficiently capture an option's time premium, i.e., the price of an option less its intrinsic value. (Intrinsic value for a call option is the amount by which the current stock price exceeds the call's strike price). An at-the-money or out-of-the-money option consists entirely of time premium. Thus, the premium received can increase the stock's overall rate of return by providing income on the position. Using the same example as above, let's say the stock advances to 110. Without selling the call, the return would be 10 percent: 110/100. With the added income from the written call, the return jumps to 20 percent: (10 + 110)/100. Covered-Call Considerations If you expect the underlying stock to rise, your objective may be an above-average return - a combination of premium income and any appreciation of the stock price up to the strike price. Thus, if the call is exercised, you have met your objective. (Keep in mind that selling a call limits the upside on your stock position to the strike price of the call. As the stock price rises above the strike price, the gain in the stock position is offset by the obligation incurred from the sold call.) If you expect the stock to remain stable, your objective may be to generate cash flow or produce income on a dormant position. If you expect the stock to decline moderately but are unwilling to sell out the stock position at its current value, your objective may be to offset some of the loss on the stock. In order to decide which call to write (sell), you must have a clear understanding of the relationship between the current market price of the underlying stock and the exercise price of each call and how that will affect your strategy. This relationship is defined in three ways:
Profit/Loss Implications
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