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Writing Covered Calls for IRA’s

02/12/2009 by admin

Writing Cvered Calls for IRA’s
The investors who look for a low-risk alternative to increase their investment returns should be considering writing covered calls on the stock they have in IRAs. This conservative approach to trading options can produce additional revenue, regardless of whether the stock price rises or falls, as long as the proper adjustments are made.
Mechanics of Covered Call Writing
A single option, whether put or call, represents a round lot, or 100 shares of a given underlying stock. Call options are upwardly speculative securities by nature, at least from a buyer’s perspective. Investors who purchase a call option believe that the price of the underlying stock is going to rise, perhaps dramatically, but they may not have the cash to purchase as much of the stock as they would like. They can therefore pay a small premium to a seller (or writer) who believes that the stock price will either decline or remain constant. This premium, in exchange for the call option, gives the buyer the right, or option, to buy the stock at the option’s strike price, instead of at the anticipated higher market price.
The strike price is the price at which the buyer of a call can purchase the shares. Options also have two kinds of value: time value and intrinsic value. For example, a call option with a strike of $20 and current market price of $30 has intrinsic value of $10. The time value is determined by the amount of time that is left until the option expires, so if the option in this example is selling for more than $10, the excess of that price is the time value.
Options are decaying assets by nature; every option has an expiration date, usually either in three, six or nine months (except for LEAPs, a kind of long-term option that can last much longer). The closer the option is to expiring, the lower its time value, because it gives the buyer that much less time for the stock to rise in price and produce a profit. (Learn about option basics in our Options Tutorial.)
As mentioned, covered call writing is the most conservative (and also the most common) way to trade options. Investors who write or sell covered calls get paid a premium in return for assuming the obligation to sell the stock at a predetermined strike price. The worst that can happen is that they are called to sell the stock to the buyer of the call at a price somewhere below the current market price. The call buyer wins in this case, because he or she paid a premium to the seller in return for the right to “call” that stock from the seller at the predetermined strike price. This strategy is known as “covered” call writing because the writer/investor owns the stock that the call is written against. Therefore, if the stock is called, the seller simply delivers the stock already on hand instead of having to come up with the cash to buy it at the current market price and then sell it to the call buyer at the lower strike price.

The investors who look for a low-risk alternative to increase their investment returns should be considering writing covered calls on the stock they have in IRAs. This conservative approach to trading options can produce additional revenue, regardless of whether the stock price rises or falls, as long as the proper adjustments are made.

Mechanism of writing covered calls

A single option, whether put or call, represents a round lot, or 100 shares of a given underlying stock. Call options are upwardly speculative securities by nature, at least from a buyer’s perspective. Investors who purchase a call option believe that the price of the underlying stock is going to rise, perhaps dramatically, but they may not have the cash to purchase as much of the stock as they would like. They can therefore pay a small premium to a seller (or writer) who believes that the stock price will either decline or remain constant. This premium, in exchange for the call option, gives the buyer the right, or option, to buy the stock at the option’s strike price, instead of at the anticipated higher market price.

The strike price is the price at which the buyer of a call can purchase the shares. Options also have two kinds of value: time value and intrinsic value.

Options are decaying assets by nature; every option has an expiration date, usually either in three, six or nine months (except for LEAPs, a kind of long-term option that can last much longer). The closer the option is to expiring, the lower its time value, because it gives the buyer that much less time for the stock to rise in price and produce a profit.

As mentioned, covered call writing is the most conservative (and also the most common) way to trade options. Investors who write or sell covered calls get paid a premium in return for assuming the obligation to sell the stock at a predetermined strike price. The worst that can happen is that they are called to sell the stock to the buyer of the call at a price somewhere below the current market price. The call buyer wins in this case, because he or she paid a premium to the seller in return for the right to “call” that stock from the seller at the predetermined strike price. This strategy is known as “covered” call writing because the writer/investor owns the stock that the call is written against. Therefore, if the stock is called, the seller simply delivers the stock already on hand instead of having to come up with the cash to buy it at the current market price and then sell it to the call buyer at the lower strike price.

Filed Under: General Tagged With: covered calls, future trading, IRA, options and futures, options and trading, retirement plan, STOCKS, strike price, trading in IRA'S, wht are covered calls

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