Options Hedging Strategies
Options can be used to protect (hedge) existing stock positions against losses. The SIE exam tests basic hedging strategies that help investors manage risk. Understanding protective puts, covered calls, and collars is essential for the exam.
Why Hedge with Options?
Hedging is using one investment to reduce the risk of another. Options provide flexible hedging tools because they allow investors to:
- Limit potential losses on stock positions
- Generate income from stocks they already own
- Protect profits without selling the stock
Protective Put (Married Put)
A protective put involves buying a put option on stock you already own. It acts like insurance against a price decline.
How It Works
| Component | Position |
|---|---|
| Stock | Own 100 shares (long stock) |
| Put option | Buy 1 put contract |
Example
- Own 100 shares of XYZ at $50/share
- Buy a put with $45 strike for $2 premium
- Total cost: $5,000 (stock) + $200 (put) = $5,200
Outcomes
| Scenario | Stock Value | Put Value | Total Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stock rises to $60 | $6,000 | Expires worthless (-$200) | Profit of $800 |
| Stock falls to $40 | $4,000 | Worth $500 (sell at $45) | Loss limited to $700 |
| Stock stays at $50 | $5,000 | Expires worthless (-$200) | Loss of $200 (premium) |
Key Points
- Maximum loss: Limited to stock purchase price minus strike price plus premium
- Maximum gain: Unlimited (stock can rise indefinitely)
- Best for: Investors who are bullish long-term but want downside protection
- Trade-off: Premium cost reduces overall returns
Analogy: A protective put is like buying car insurance—you pay a premium hoping you will not need it, but it protects against major losses.
Covered Call
A covered call involves selling (writing) a call option on stock you already own. It generates income but limits upside potential.
How It Works
| Component | Position |
|---|---|
| Stock | Own 100 shares (long stock) |
| Call option | Sell 1 call contract |
Example
- Own 100 shares of XYZ at $50/share
- Sell a call with $55 strike for $3 premium
- Premium received: $300
Outcomes
| Scenario | Stock Value | Call Obligation | Total Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stock rises to $60 | Sold at $55 (called away) | Must sell | Profit of $800 ($500 gain + $300 premium) |
| Stock falls to $45 | $4,500 | Expires worthless | Loss reduced to $200 (offset by $300 premium) |
| Stock stays at $50 | $5,000 | Expires worthless | Profit of $300 (premium only) |
Key Points
- Maximum gain: Limited to strike price minus stock cost plus premium
- Maximum loss: Stock can fall to zero (minus premium received)
- Best for: Investors with neutral-to-slightly-bullish outlook
- Trade-off: Gives up potential gains above the strike price
Why "Covered"? The call is "covered" because you own the underlying shares. If the call is exercised, you simply deliver shares you already own.
Collar Strategy
A collar combines a protective put and a covered call on the same stock. It provides limited protection while reducing the cost of hedging.
How It Works
| Component | Position |
|---|---|
| Stock | Own 100 shares (long stock) |
| Put option | Buy 1 put (below current price) |
| Call option | Sell 1 call (above current price) |
Example
- Own 100 shares of XYZ at $50/share
- Buy a put with $45 strike for $2 premium (pay $200)
- Sell a call with $55 strike for $2 premium (receive $200)
- Net cost: $0 (zero-cost collar)
Outcomes
| Stock Price at Expiration | Result |
|---|---|
| Above $55 | Shares called away at $55; gain capped at $500 |
| Between $45-$55 | Both options expire; keep stock |
| Below $45 | Exercise put, sell at $45; loss limited to $500 |
Key Points
- Creates a "floor" and "ceiling" for the stock price
- Zero-cost collar: When premium received from call equals premium paid for put
- Maximum gain: Strike price of call minus stock cost
- Maximum loss: Stock cost minus strike price of put
- Best for: Investors wanting to lock in gains or protect a concentrated position
Strategy Comparison
| Strategy | Protection | Income | Upside | Downside |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protective Put | Yes | No | Unlimited | Limited |
| Covered Call | Partial | Yes | Limited | High |
| Collar | Yes | Offset | Limited | Limited |
Uncovered (Naked) vs. Covered Positions
Covered Positions
- Covered call: Own the stock
- Cash-secured put: Have cash to buy if assigned
Uncovered (Naked) Positions
- Naked call: Do not own the stock (VERY RISKY)
- Naked put: Do not have cash to buy
Warning: Naked calls have unlimited risk because the stock can rise indefinitely, and the writer must buy shares at market price to deliver. This is considered one of the riskiest options strategies.
Key Takeaways
- Protective puts provide insurance against stock declines (cost: premium)
- Covered calls generate income but cap upside potential
- Collars create a floor and ceiling, often at low or no net cost
- Hedging strategies involve trade-offs between protection and profit potential
- Covered positions are less risky than uncovered (naked) positions
An investor owns 100 shares of stock and buys a put option on those shares. This strategy is called a:
A covered call strategy is MOST appropriate for an investor who:
In a collar strategy, the investor:
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