Investing Adventures

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Level II Quotes are a Necessity

Filed under: Investing Resources — Jorge @ 7:29 am

If you have access to Level II quotes, use them and use them well. If you do not have access to Level II quotes, find a way to get them. It’s worth the money.

Level II quotes give you a real time look at the market, a heartbeat if you will. You can see the buyers placing pressure on the sellers and vice versa. Not only does this work with stocks, but with options and futures in addition to other investment types. Case in point. A week or so ago I placed a “sucker” bet on XTO 60 Sept contracts from $15-$25. This morning I noticed XTO’s price spiking with the Level II quotes I use from OptionsXpress. The options price spiked for about 5 minutes. In those 5 minutes I went ahead and sold my sucker bet. The result? A quick $70 gain. Granted, that’s not a large sum of money, but when you only have $1500 to invest, that’s a nice 5% gain. It also helps to bring my portfolio back to break even.

Moral of the story: Use Level II quotes in addition with your research. Your portfolio will thank you for it.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Options – Calls from a Buyer’s Perspective

Filed under: Investing Resources, Options — Jorge @ 6:00 am

The two basic options are calls and puts. Let’s start with the buyer’s perspective on call options. We’ll come back to the put options and the seller’s perspective on options in the near future.

Buyer – Calls

Let’s start with a formal definition from Investopedia:

1. The period of time between the opening and closing of some future markets wherein the prices are established through an auction process.

2. An option contract giving the owner the right (but not the obligation) to buy a specified amount of an underlying security at a specified price within a specified time.

A buyer may choose to purchase the simplest of options, a call or a put. A call gives the buyer the right but not the obligation to purchase set item at agreed upon price by the expiration date. Using the LVLT example from the Options – What are they? post, a buyer purchasing that call has the right to purchase 100 shares of LVLT at $5.00 per share until the expiration date in December. As you recall, expiration is defined as the third Saturday of the expiration month. Now, the basic motto of investing is buy low and sell high. Imagine purchasing a call option for $100 at a strike price of $5.00 per contract. Fast forward a month later. The stock’s market price has risen to $6.00. Is it worth exercising that option? Not really. You can buy your LVLT stock at $5 in accordance with the option and sell it immediately at $6. This leaves you with what’s known as breakeven. You didn’t lose any money but you didn’t make any either. Imagine the stock rises to $6.50 the month of expiration. $6.50 – $5.00 strike price leaves you with a spread of $1.50. Exercising your option netted you $150 – $100 premium, for a profit of $50. You turned $100 into $150, or a 50% gain. Not too shabby. Of course if the stock price goes below your strike price of $5, your option becomes worthless. But in the end, all you lost was $100 instead of the corresponding loss of owning the stock.

That’s the basic call option from a buyer’s perspective. Remember that there are many strategies on when to purchase and exercise your bought call options. But hopefully now you have the basic knowledge of what they are. Good luck!

Disclaimer: I’m not a broker or a financial advisor. These are stocks I own or plan to own in the near future. Extensive research has been made on these stocks beforehand. You understand that the no content published on InvestingAdventures.com constitutes a recommendation that any particular security, portfolio of securities, transaction or investment strategy is suitable for any specific person.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Options – What are they?

Filed under: Investing Resources, Options — Jorge @ 6:00 am

In it’s most basic form, an option is a contract between a buyer and seller for a specific item at a specific price by a specific date. A more formal definition can be found at Investopedia:

A financial derivative which represents a contract sold by one party (option writer) to another party (option holder). The contract offers the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy (call) or sell (put) a security or other financial asset at an agreed-upon price (the strike price) during a certain period of time or on a specific date (exercise date).

Thus, the four parts of an option are the following:

  1. Item traded. Let’s use Level 3 Communications, LVLT, as an example
  2. Date the option expires
  3. Price agreed upon to purchase the item (in this case LVLT)
  4. A call or put option

In the stock market, options are defined in that order. I recently sold an option for LVLT with an agreed upon price of $5.00 that expires in Decemeber. Using the format above, the option would be described as LVLT Dec 5 Call. Simple huh? Those are the basics of reading an option.

Some key facts to know about options. First, options are sold in even numbered lots. What’s an even numbered lot? Any multiple of 100. In other words, one option controls 100 shares of a stock, without physically owning the stock. If you haven’t begun to realize just yet, that’s not a bad way to leverage with little capital. Therefore, if you were to purchase 3 options for LVLT Dec 5 Call, you would effectively control 300 shares of LVLT without physically owning it. This has its drawbacks of course. You can’t earn dividends on shares you don’t physically own, for example.

Next, options have a premium. Think of it as a fee for locking in the price of any kind of investment. Assume the fee to purchase the LVLT Dec 5 Call costs $1.00. Remember that options are sold in even numbered lots. Therefore, one option would cost $1.00 * 100 shares, or $100. 10 contracts of LVLT Dec 5 Call would cost you $1 * 100 * 10, or $1,000. This premium goes to the seller of the contract. Selling options will be discussed at a later date.

Lastly, dealing with options requires you to deal with time. The closer you are to your expiration date, the less time you have to cash your option out and make a profit. Time is always against the buyer’s side and as a result options don’t necessarily favor the buyer. Options expire on the third Saturday of the expiration month. This mean, for most of us regular investors, we must cash out our options the Friday before the third Saturday of the expiration month. If the option isn’t cashed out, or exercised, it becomes worthless and your premium paid for the option is lost.

There you have it. A basic description of options. There are multitude of strategies involving the purchasing and selling of options. I’ll try and go over the basics one by one from my perspective (as is of course the theme of this blog). However, there are quite a few references regarding options and options strategies. Check out the Investing Resources page for a list of references.

Disclaimer: I’m not a broker or a financial adviser. These are stocks I own or plan to own in the near future. Extensive research has been made on these stocks beforehand. You understand that the no content published on InvestingAdventures.com constitutes a recommendation that any particular security, portfolio of securities, transaction or investment strategy is suitable for any specific person.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Investing Resources – Updated

Filed under: Financial Website, Investing Resources — Jorge @ 5:30 am

Investing Resources for Equities has been updated to include the Chicago Board Options Exchange as well as an online tutorial class on options trading.

Saturday, July 21, 2007

List of Investing Resources

Filed under: Financial Website, Investing Resources — Jorge @ 4:00 am

Throughout the learning process of equity trading, there’s bound to be a huge list of resources such as books, websites, and CDs to draw from. I’ll start compiling a list of those resources as I come across them. I’ll try and review each one as best as I can in a series I like to call Investing Resources and Reviews. Let’s kick off this series by listing a few of the resources I’ve had direct contact with.

Resources – Equities

Websites – Commentary

Websites – Educational Materials

Websites – Research

Books

  • Jim Cramer’s Mad Money: Watch TV, Get Rich – James Cramer
  • Jim Cramer’s Real Money: Sane Investing in an Insane World – James Cramer
  • Getting Started in Options – Michael C. Thomsett
  • The Essays of Warren Buffett: Lessons for Corporate America – Warren E. Buffett

Newspapers

Magazines

Software

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