What to know about naked options — from how it works to why it’s risky

Naked options can involve risk and should be used only by experienced traders and investors, if at all considered.

A naked option is one sold if you don’t own the underlying security the contract’s based on.
Naked options potentially let traders pocket the option fee without ever having to invest any money.
Naked options are highly risky: Losses can be high if the seller has to honor the options contract.

Options trading has become increasingly popular with investors over the last few years — they’re a way to lock in good prices on stocks without being obliged to actually purchase if they don’t perform as predicted. 

A naked option is a type of option which is particularly risky, even if it appears to offer a way of profiting at a minimal cost. Here’s how it works and why it can be a risky choice. 

How does options trading work?

An option is a contract giving you the right — but not the obligation — to buy or sell an asset (usually a stock) at a specific price before a specific date. Here’s an overview of how options work.

Options basics

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Options come in two basic varieties: An option to buy is a call. An option to sell is a put.Option contracts run anywhere from one to nine months and are usually for 100 shares.The option-buyer pays a fee, or premium, for the contract. The premium is based partly on the price at which the option-holder might buy or sell the asset — the strike price — and partly on the length of the contract. 

What is a naked option?

“Naked options means you are holding an options position without having a position with the underlying stock,” says Edward Moya, a senior analyst at Oanda.

In other words, when a trader sells a naked option, they are selling an option without being in possession of the stock the option agreement is about. That means they aren’t covered in the event the buyer of that option exercises it. 

Naked options relate only to selling (i.e. writing) an options contract rather than buying it. Naked options come in two varieties: naked calls and naked puts.

Naked call options

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A call option lets the purchaser of the option buy a stock at a certain price (the “strike price”) within a certain timeframe. If you sell a call option, it means you will have to sell the underlying stock if the option is exercised.

This becomes a naked call when you don’t already own that stock to sell it. 

Naked put options

Naked put options involve selling a put contract, which would oblige you (as the writer of the contract) to buy a security at a set price if exercised.

The naked put has the same potential reward as the naked call, only with the stock moving in the opposite way. If the stock rises above the strike price, the put-option holder (who bet it would fall) will let the option expire, letting the option seller walk away with the premium.

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But if the underlying stock’s price falls below the strike price, the option-holder will certainly exercise the option, allowing them to make a profit. If you’re the writer of the put contract, you will therefore have to buy this stock at the strike price, and you will take a loss if you then sell it at the lower market price.

Covered options

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The opposite of a naked option is a covered option. It means you do own the underlying stock the option is written on, or have a position in it, “covering” you if the option gets exercised. 

With calls, being “covered” means owning the underlying stock. With puts, “covered” means holding a short position in, or short-selling, the underlying stock (that is, borrowing the shares from a broker). This practice would defray the cost of having to buy that stock at a higher-than-market price.

Who uses naked options?

The main attraction of naked options is that they potentially offer traders income without significant cost. That income is the premium — the fee the option buyer pays for the option. With naked options, the aim of the options writer is to pocket this premium without having to spend money on owning or shorting the corresponding stock.

“Experienced traders who have a strong belief they have a handle on what the short-term move of a stock will be, will often consider trading naked options,” says Edward Moya.

That said, the seeming promise of ‘easy money’ has also attracted less experienced traders with a higher threshold for risk.

“Legions of new stock traders eventually dabble with options, and the ones that trade naked options quickly learn of the big risks that come with it,” says Moya.

Why are naked options risky?

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There are two main reasons why naked options are one of the riskiest trading strategies out there.

Large losses: Regardless of whether it’s a naked call or put, losses are potentially unlimited. With naked calls, a trader runs the risk that the stock they may be forced to sell (but don’t currently own) witnesses considerable price rises. With naked puts, they may end up having to buy a stock at a price that’s considerably higher than the price they will then be able to sell it for on the open market.Direction and timing: With naked options — as with options in general —you need to have a very strong handle on not only the way a security might move but also when it will make its move. This is taxing even for the most experienced professional analysts, let alone novice traders. “Identifying the right direction of a stock and timing makes trading naked options very difficult,” says Moya. 

The bottom line

A naked option is an option contract you sell without actually owning the underlying security the contract’s written on. In the case of naked calls, this involves selling a call option without already owning the underlying security, while in the case of naked puts, it involves selling a put option without short-selling the security.

Naked options are tempting because they potentially let traders pocket the premium for writing options without having to buy any stock in advance — or even at all, if the option goes unexercised. 

However, the strategy can open investors to significant losses. Without actually owning the underlying stock, “there is no hedge in the position — you’re basically gambling as to whether a stock will go up or down,” says Robert Ross, a senior equity analyst at Mauldin Economics.

This is why, as a strategy, naked options should be used only by highly experienced traders and investors — if ever. 

Read the original article on Business Insider

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