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Thursday, January 6, 2011

Day Traders and Swing Traders and Options? Maybe!

Typical day traders and swing traders look for stocks with quick, 
short term movements, and are not in the business of holding 
positions overnight let alone a week or two. So the use of 
options has not usually been a component of their trading 
strategies.

Now however, some new opportunities for profit are available 
since many day trading firms are allowing their traders to trade 
options. Unfortunately, many option strategies do not apply to 
the quick in and out nature of day trading. Neither day traders 
nor swing traders are typically in a single stock long enough for 
the strategy of selling options for premium collection to be 
viable.

Since these traders often look for break-outs, and sometimes go 
bottom fishing to find opportunities for profit, a premium paying 
option might work well for them. Why? Because the trader would 
be buying protection from catastrophic losses. Bottom fishing 
and breakouts are associated with volatility, which means 
uncertainty and risk. However, there is a strategy that will 
provide the necessary protection for these traders to carry 
positions through overnight risk, while remaining fully 
protected. This would still allow also them to take advantage of 
the large potential upswing that was the original goal of 
identifying the bottom and the break-out. This strategy is 
called the protective put.

THE PROTECTIVE PUT

The Protective Put Strategy involves the purchase of put options 
in combination with the purchase of stock and works well in 
situations where a stock is prone to rapid, volatile movements.

A put option gives an owner the right, but not the obligation, to 
sell a certain stock, at a certain price, by a specified date. 
For this right, the owner pays a premium. The buyer, who 
receives the premium, is obligated to take delivery of the stock 
should the owner wish to sell at the strike price by the 
specified date. A strategically used put option offers 
protection against substantial loss.

The protective put strategy is a strategy that is ideal for a 
trader who wants full hedging coverage. This strategy is very 
effective in stocks that normally trade under high volatility, or 
in stocks that normally do not trade under such high volatility 
but may be involved in an event driven, highly volatile 
situation.

When an investor purchases a stock, they can buy the put 
(protective put) to provide a proper hedge. The construction of 
this position is actually quite simple. You buy the stock and 
you buy the put in a one to one ratio meaning one put for every 
one hundred shares. Remember, one option contract is worth 100 
shares. So, if you buy 400 shares of IBM then you need to 
purchase exactly four puts.

From a premium standpoint, you must keep in mind that by 
purchasing an option, you are paying out money as opposed to 
collecting money. This means that your position must 
"outperform" the amount of money that you paid for the put. If 
you were to pay $1.00 for a put and you owned stock against it, 
the stock would have to increase in price $1.00 just to break 
even. The protective put strategy has time premium working 
against it, thus the stock needs to move to a greater degree, and 
more quickly, to offset the cost of the put.

When we buy a stock, three potential outcomes exist. The stock 
can go up, go down or it can remain stagnant. If we were to 
analyze the three scenarios, we would find that only one 
scenario, the up scenario, can produce a positive return and 
that's only when the stock increases more than the amount you 
paid for the puts. The other scenarios produce losses. If the 
stock is stagnant, you lose the amount you paid for the put. If 
the stock goes down, you lose again- but the loss is limited. It 
is the limiting of loss in highly volatile situations that makes 
the protective put an attractive and useful strategy.

This is how it works! Imagine you buy stock for $31.00 and buy 
the 30 strike put for $1.00. If the stock goes down, the 
position will produce a loss. For example, if the stock is down 
to $30.00 (down $1.00) at expiration of the option, you have a 
$1.00 capital loss. With the stock at $30.00, the 30 strike puts 
will be worthless, thus you incur a $1.00 loss because that is 
what you paid for the put. Your total loss will be $2.00. Using 
the protective put strategy set a cap on your losses. The put 
strategy's attractiveness is that it will allow you to set loss 
limits!

Let's see how that works. We'll set the stock price down to 
$28.00. Since you purchased the stock at $31.00, there will be a 
capital loss of $3.00. The puts, however, are now in the money 
with the stock below $30.00. With the stock at $28.00, the 30 
strike puts are worth $2.00. You paid $1.00 for them so you have 
a $1.00 profit in the puts. Combine the put profit ($1.00) with 
the capital loss ($3.00) and you have an overall loss of $2.00. 
The $2.00 loss is the maximum you can lose no matter how low the 
stock goes because the buyer of your put must take the stock at 
the strike price. This is the protection the put provides.

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