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Financial Markets. Options Market

Options Market

 

Definition

The options market is a segment of the financial system where contracts are traded that grant the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell an underlying asset at a specified price within a certain period or on a specific date. Unlike futures, where both parties have obligations, options create asymmetry: the buyer has the right, and the seller has the obligation.

Essence of the Contract

There are two basic types: Call (right to buy) and Put (right to sell). Each option has a strike price, an expiration date, a premium (cost of the contract), and an underlying asset. The buyer pays the premium upfront. This represents the maximum risk for the buyer. The seller receives the premium but takes on potentially unlimited risk (for a call) or significant risk (for a put).

Where Options Are Traded

Exchange-traded options are centrally traded on exchanges such as CBOE or CME. There are also OTC (over-the-counter) options, which are concluded directly between institutional parties, often in the banking sector. Exchange-traded options are standardized. OTC options are flexible but carry counterparty risk.

What Assets Have Options

Stocks (AAPL, TSLA), indices (SPX, NDX), futures (CL, GC), ETFs (SPY), currencies, bonds, and even volatility (VIX).

How Option Prices Are Formed

The price consists of two components: intrinsic value and time decay (time value). It is influenced by:

– Current asset price

– Volatility (implied volatility)

– Time to expiration

– Interest rates

– Dividends

Volatility is a key driver. Options are often traded based on expected volatility rather than direction.

Greeks

Delta – sensitivity to changes in the asset price

Gamma – change in delta

Theta – time decay

Vega – sensitivity to volatility

Rho – sensitivity to interest rates

These parameters determine the behavior of a position.

Trading Hours

Most stock options are traded during the main exchange trading session. Futures options have broader hours. Liquidity is concentrated around the opening and closing of the session.

Who Trades Options

Market makers provide liquidity. Hedge funds employ complex strategies. Institutions use options to hedge portfolios. Retail traders use directional or income strategies (e.g., covered call).

Strategies

Simple purchase of call or put

Spreads (vertical, calendar)

Straddle / Strangle (volatility play)

Iron Condor (profit from sideways market)

Covered Call (income on stocks)

Options vs. Futures

A future has a linear payoff. An option has a non-linear payoff. A future reacts symmetrically to movements. An option can benefit from time or volatility even without significant price movement.

Options vs. CFDs

A CFD mirrors the asset's movement one-to-one. An option has a complex pricing model. A CFD is a directional instrument. An option is a risk structure instrument.

Risks

Time decay

Change in volatility

Low liquidity of certain strikes

Incorrect risk assessment when selling naked options

Role in the System

Options are a tool for risk management and volatility redistribution. They allow for portfolio hedging, the formation of complex strategies, and the assessment of market expectations through implied volatility.

Summary

The options market is a mechanism for managing risk and volatility. It is more complex than futures but offers flexibility in strategy construction. Its main features are risk asymmetry and dependence on time and volatility.

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