Three More Reasons We Love To Trade Options

 | Feb 17, 2021 12:22AM ET

By Neil Szczepanski

This is the second and final instalment on options trading. If you missed the first half of this article entitled “5 Reasons Why People Prefer To Trade Options Over Stocks ” then click on the title to revisit it.

In this second and final instalment, I will walk through how adjustments and risk management of options can help give you better control of your trades and profits.

h2 Reduce Risk/h2

Everyone has heard a story about someone who mischaracterized or misunderstood their options trade, then having their account blow up when the underlying stock goes the wrong way. This happened recently with a Robinhood trader who woke up one morning to see his account at -$730,165. In this tragic event the kid took his life because he thought he had lost $730,165 and couldn’t reach his brokerage to understand his account. We learned later that the negative balance did not represent uncollateralized indebtedness at all, but rather his temporary balance until the stocks underlying his assigned options actually settled into his account. In short it was a delay in processing of the options contracts in his account, and not the actual trade that went awry. This is why it is very important that in this game of trading you get the proper training so you understand your risk. The risk is real.

So how can options be less risky? Simple: because you can define your risk right at the outset of the trade. Further, you can adjust your risk/reward ratio 24/7, and not just during market hours with a stop loss like stocks. In very volatile markets risk management becomes even more important and your exposure to unlimited risk can destroy your account very quickly. Think back to the tech bubble in 2002, or the subprime mortgage crisis, and don’t forget the consequences of the great recession. Or even the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020! The most successful traders are good at maximizing their winners, but more importantly, they are even better at minimizing their losses on losing trades. This includes making sure you prepare for black swan events.

One of the questions I always get is how do you control and/or manage your risk with options? In the following diagram, you can see that if you use options around your existing positions you can cap your max loss at about $7. To achieve this, the trade-off is to cap your upside at about $13. In this scenario, we own stock the orange line represents this. Let’s assume the price is $110 so the profit is about $3. We sell a call to pay for a put that we buy. So the max profit in the line created by selling the call and the max loss is defined by the buying of the put. This is called collaring your stock position using stock options. As I mentioned this trade is on 24/7 and not just during market hours like a stop for stocks.

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