Using Options to Buy Stocks at Discount Prices (2024)

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Using Options to Buy Stocks at a Discount

Owning shares is a dream most people have shared at some time orother. But many people also fear the perceived risk in doing so and forthis reason, hesitate. But did you know that if you understand somethingabout options and you're thinking of owning shares, you could be using options to buy stocks at a much cheaper price than if you just went to your broker and simply bought them?

Let's take an example to illustrate how it works. We'll assume that the shares of a listed company arecurrently trading on your local stock exchange at $35 and you believe they would be a value investment if the price falls another $5 or so.

Potential Reasons to Buy at $30

You may haveconcluded this for any number of reasons. For example, you may have looked at a daily price chart of thestock and noticed a trend such as an ascending "channel pattern" or observed an established weekly or monthly price support area.

This leads you to believethat it won't be long before the price will fall to, let's say $30 in the nearfuture, at which price, the shares are worth buying. You understand the advantages of using options to buy stocks.

Another reason might be that you're an investor who has analyzed the fundamentals of the company, Warren Buffett style. You may have noticed for example, that the Price/Earnings Ratio is at an attractive level and so have concluded that $30 is a good price to buy.

Or you might be a short term stock trader and you've observedthis stock's price starting to fall in such a way that is consistentwith past movements of a similar size.

So you believe it is likely toreach $30 sometime within the next month or so and you're happy to buy it at that price because you are confident that the price action will reverse upwards again. You've educated yourself aboutusing options to buys stocks.

Or you just be an investor who likes using options to buy stocksto hold for the long termin order to collect dividends and eventually realize a capital gain. But you would like to get a better deal onpurchase price. You likeusing options to buy stock as part of your investment strategy.

Using Options to Buy Stocks at Discount Prices (2)

Using Options to Buy Stocks - Here's How

Shares in a company are trading at $35 today and you're prepared to buy them if and when the pricereaches $30. You would need sufficient funds in your broker account topurchase the stock at the $30 price tag in order to utilize this strategy.

When the stockis trading at $35 or less, you would SELL "out of the money" put optionswith an expiration date the following month and an exercise price of $30.

Selling option contracts is sometimes called "writing" and the since options are only legal contracts and not assets, you cancreate them out of nothing.

This option contract with a $30 exercise price means that you are willing to allow the market to "put"shares to you at $30 each up until the agreed option expiration date.

In consideration for giving this right to others, you would receive a premiumwhich would be credited to your account. The premium is yours to keep,no matter what happens after that.

Let's say your receive $2.50 for eachshare and you sold 10 put option contracts. Assuming that each option contract covers 100 shares, youwould receive $2,500 (10 x 100 x $2.50).

After you've done this, one of two things can happen:

  1. The share price could fall to $30 or below by the optionexpiration date. The options would probably be exercised and you would be forced to buy the sharesat $30. 1,000 shares would cost you $30,000 less the $2,500you received for selling the put options. $30,000 - $2,500 = $27,500 and this means that the effective cost to purchase those 1,000 shares is only $27.50 per share.
  2. The share price never falls as low as $30, in which case you simply keep the $2,500 you received from sellingthe options and walk away with a profit.

But let's say that the market price of this company's shares had fallen to $28.00 by thetime your put option contract expired.

You would be obliged to purchase 1,000 shares at $30 for a total cost of $30,000 but the whole deal would still only cost you $27.50 per share, or $27,500.

If you had not used this put option strategy and hadwaited instead to buy when the price fell to $28, you would've paid $28,000 and be out of pocket an extra $500 - soyou're still ahead!

It's Not Over - What to do Next

Now that you have purchased 1,000 shares, the next thing you may wish to consider, is to immediately sell (write) "out of the money" CALL options onthose shares. This is called a covered call.

The preferable strike price in our example would be atleast $30 but higher is better - that way, if the share price rises, youmake some gain on the shares, if exercised.

But if the price keepsfalling, the call options might expire worthless and you simply keep theincome, thus further reducing the overall cost of your purchased sharesand offsetting any capital loss.

Now Let's Add an Averaging Strategy

If the share price continues to fall and if you still have more funds available, you could use an averaging strategyto buy more of this company's shares, but this time for say, $24.

Let's say the pricehas fallen to $28 as above and you have purchased your 1,000 shares at $30but remembering that thanks to your option strategy, your effective cost was only $27.50.

You now immediately sell a further put option contract with next month's expiration date but this time with an exercise price of only $24 receiving a further premium of $2.50.

If the share price doesn't fall as low as $24 by the new expirationdate, you keep the premium and it further offsets the cost of your original 1,000shares - which instead of $27.50 now effectively cost only $24.50 per share.

Remember, if you had bought the shares at market prices without using put options, at this point your cost would be $30 per share.

Butlet's imagine that some negative news for this company appears and it's stock price fell as low as $20 by the new option expiration date. Your sold put options would oblige you to buy the shares at $24 less your $2.50 premium received for sellingthe options - a total cost of $21.50 per share.

You now own 1,000 shares costing $27.50 and a further 1,000 sharescosting $21.50. That's 2,000 shares at a total cost of $49,000 or $24.50per share. If you had purchased these shares without using options tobuy stocks, i.e. just "averaging down" instead, they would've cost you $54,000all up, or an average $27 per share.

With the market price now traveling around $20 per share, your unrealized capital loss at this point would be $7 per share, or $14,000 for 2,000 shares. But let's remember, you never realize a loss until you sell the shares. Your strategy may be to hold them until the price rises again and receive dividends in the meantime.

Bear in mind, this is a 'worst case' scenario. A company whose stock price has fallen from $30 to $20 in two months is either in trouble, or there's big economic news about.

So even when the market is taking a dive as described above, wherethe stock price has fallen over two months from $35 to only $20 - ifyou had sold put options as part of your strategy, you would be betteroff by 2,000 x $2.50 or $5,000. This is a 10 percent discount afterbrokerage costs.

Now that the price has fallen to $20 you simply do it again fornext month and receive another premium which will offset the overallcost of your two previous purchases if the price begins to rise again.

By using options to buy stocks, you will eventually own shares in yourchosen company at a discounted price which in the long run will meangreater capital gains.

"Using options to buy stocks" as outlined above, is one of the strategies taught in greater depth using a specific example, in the popular Options Trading Pro Systemseries of videos.

Using Options to Buy Stocks at Discount Prices (3)

Using Options to Buy Stocks at Discount Prices (4)

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Using Options to Buy Stocks at Discount Prices (2024)

FAQs

How do options work to buy stock at a lower price? ›

How to Buy Stocks by Using Put Options
  • Sell one out-of-the-money put option for every 100 shares of stock you'd like to own. ...
  • Wait for the stock price to decrease to the put options' strike price.
  • If the options are assigned by the options exchange, buy the underlying shares at the strike price.
Oct 31, 2021

How do you buy stocks at a discounted price? ›

Selling a put option allows you to specify the “discount” price you're willing to pay for a stock—and also collect income up front when you sell it. If the stock doesn't fall below the discount price you're willing to pay, you don't have to buy the stock.

How do you buy options at low prices? ›

Strategies to Undertake
  1. Focus on Smaller Stocks That Offer the Potential of Greater Profits. ...
  2. Avoid Short-term, Out-of-the-money Options. ...
  3. Buy Higher-delta Options. ...
  4. Buy Options With anAappropriate Time-frame Before Expiry. ...
  5. Consider Sentiment Analysis. ...
  6. Implement Underlying Stock Analysis. ...
  7. Avoid Complacency and Greed.

What happens if you buy a call option lower than the stock price? ›

For call options, strikes lower than the market price are said to be in-the-money (ITM), since you can exercise the option to buy the stock for less than the market and immediately sell it at the higher market price.

How do options work for dummies? ›

A call option gives you the opportunity to profit from price gains in the underlying stock at a fraction of the cost of owning the stock. Put option: Put options give the owner (seller) the right (obligation) to sell (buy) a specific number of shares of the underlying stock at a specific price by a specific date.

Should I exercise my stock options when price is low? ›

Remember that you never want to exercise your shares when the Fair Market Value (FMV) is below the exercise price; these shares are in theory “under water”, or of no monetary value to you. The other very important fact that you need to understand is what type of option you have been granted.

How do you buy stocks at exact price? ›

A limit order is an order to buy or sell a security at a specific price or better. A buy limit order can only be executed at the limit price or lower, and a sell limit order can only be executed at the limit price or higher.

What does it mean if a stock is at a discount? ›

In finance and investing, a discount refers to a situation when a security is trading for lower than its fundamental or intrinsic value.

Is averaging down a good strategy? ›

The primary benefit to averaging down is that an investor can buy more of a stock that they want to own anyway, at a better price than they paid previously — with the potential for gains.

Which option strategy is most profitable? ›

If you are looking for an option selling strategy that has unlimited profits with limited risks, then the synthetic call strategy is the best way to go. As part of this strategy, the trader purchase put options on the stock that they are holding and which they think will rise in the future.

What is the safest option strategy? ›

The safest option strategy is one that involves limited risk, such as buying protective puts or employing conservative covered call writing. Selling cash-secured puts stands as the most secure strategy in options trading, offering a clear risk profile and prospects for income while keeping overall risk to a minimum.

How do beginners buy options? ›

  1. How to Trade Options in 5 Steps.
  2. 1.Assess Your Readiness.
  3. 2.Choose a Broker and Get Approved to Trade Options.
  4. 3.Create a Trading Plan.
  5. 4.Understand the Tax Implications.
  6. 5.Continuous Learning and Risk Management.
  7. Buying Calls (Long Calls)
  8. Buying Puts (Long Puts)

What is the downside of buying call options? ›

Another disadvantage of buying options is that they lose value over time because there is an expiration date. Stocks do not have an expiration date. Also, the owner of a stock receives dividends, whereas the owners of call options do not receive dividends.

Why do option buyers lose money? ›

As options approach their expiration date, they lose value due to time decay (theta). The closer an option is to expiration, the faster its time value erodes. If the underlying asset's price doesn't move in the desired direction quickly enough, options buyers can suffer losses as the time value diminishes.

Why would you buy a call option instead of the stock? ›

If the stock price moves up significantly, buying a call option offers much better profits than owning the stock. To realize a net profit on the option, the stock has to move above the strike price, by enough to offset the premium paid to the call seller.

What happens if you buy a put option and price goes up? ›

A put option becomes more valuable as the price of the underlying stock or security decreases. Conversely, a put option loses its value as the price of the underlying stock increases. 3 As a result, they are typically used for hedging purposes or to speculate on downside price action.

How does buying stock options work? ›

Options are a form of derivative contract that gives buyers of the contracts (the option holders) the right (but not the obligation) to buy or sell a security at a chosen price at some point in the future. Option buyers are charged an amount called a premium by the sellers for such a right.

How does option price relate to stock price? ›

The movement of the price of the stock up or down has a direct, though not equal, effect on the price of the option. As the price of a stock rises, the more likely it is that the price of a call option will rise and the price of a put option will fall.

How does option price change with stock price? ›

Changes in the underlying security price can increase or decrease the value of an option. These price changes have opposite effects on calls and puts. For instance, as the value of the underlying security rises, a call will generally increase. However, the value of a put will generally decrease in price.

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