Welcome To Options Trading For Newbies


The Mathematical Edge Options Gives To The. Seller's



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Options Trading For Newbies
2. The Mathematical Edge Options Gives To The. Seller's
(Find a Stock's IV Rank)
It's happening now, we are in uncharted territory for most of you, but yes, for every options trade, there is a buyer and a seller. Every successful business on Earth has an edge that gives them a long-term competitive advantage. In options that edge is all about the math, and more specifically something called implied volatility. Using a casino as a model to showcase how math factors into probability, let's first look at how they make money. In almost every case, they make money on small, theoretical probability imbalances. They can achieve this through the reduction in payouts or reduced odds of winning. An option's price the some of its two components. The first component is the options intrinsic value which is nothing more than value if it were exercised/assigned right now. For example, if you were long a $40 strike call option, which is a bullish strategy and the stock was trading at $50 a share, you'd have $10 in intrinsic value because you could buy the stock at $40 and resell it immediately at $50 fora profit. The second component of options pricing is Extrinsic Value or more commonly referred to as Time Value. Extrinsic value is the difference between of the market price of the option and its intrinsic value. Extrinsic value is also the portion of the value assigned to the option by outside factors.
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Generally speaking, an option contract with 100 days until expiration is more valuable than an option contract with ten days until expiration. The price of time, therefore, is influenced by various factors in the market, such as the number of remaining days until expiration, current stock price, current strike price, and interest rates, but none of these areas significant as implied volatility. Implied volatility is the only element or piece of an option's Extrinsic Value that is "unknown" or "estimated" by the market. Another fancy way of saying "estimated" in finance is to use the word implied. If you think about it fora second, you w know the factors that contribute to the time premium of any options contract. What we will not know is the volatility of the stock in the future. We will always be able to calculate how many days are remaining until expiration. We also always know the stock price relative to its strike price or the option's intrinsic value. And, we can lookup the current long-term interest rates. The ONLY data point in an option’s price we don't know for certain is how volatile the stock will be in the future We can look back and seethe historical volatility of a stock, but to know what will happen in the future would require a time machine Will the stock move 20% per year on average Will it move more than 20%? Will it move less than 20%?
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We will never know this for certain, but what we can do is estimate it's future volatility. In simple terms, implied volatility is calculated by taking an option’s current price, and shows what the market feels or implies about the stock’s volatility in the future. Its based on the pricing from a combination of at-the-money and out-of-the-money calls and puts on both sides. In other words, the market itself determines expected or implied volatility through the activity of the investors like you and me placing trades.

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