{"id":175541,"date":"2020-08-31T16:28:00","date_gmt":"2020-08-31T20:28:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ibkrcampus.com\/trading-lessons\/introduction-to-options-using-tws-mosaic-calls-and-puts\/"},"modified":"2024-11-04T16:35:20","modified_gmt":"2024-11-04T21:35:20","slug":"introduction-to-options-using-tws-mosaic-calls-and-puts","status":"publish","type":"trading-lessons","link":"https:\/\/www.interactivebrokers.com\/campus\/trading-lessons\/introduction-to-options-using-tws-mosaic-calls-and-puts\/","title":{"rendered":"Introduction to Options Using TWS Mosaic &#8211; Calls and Puts"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>What is an option?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>An option contract is an agreement between buyer and seller over an agreed upon number of shares at<br \/>\na price agreed upon today for delivery at a set time in the future.<\/p>\n<p>The buyer has the right, but not the obligation, to take delivery of, or to deliver, that set number of<br \/>\nshares at or before the time the contract expires at a fixed price and regardless of where the share price<br \/>\nis trading at the time that the option is exercised. The buyer pays the seller a premium for the right to<br \/>\nbuy or sell at this fixed price at a later date. We\u2019ll return to buying and selling rights very shortly.<\/p>\n<p>In exchange for taking in the premium, the option seller has the obligation to deliver, or take delivery of,<br \/>\nthose shares at that fixed price if the buyer exercises his right to call away the shares, or put the shares<br \/>\nto the seller.<\/p>\n<p>A word about risk &#8211; The Buyers\u2019 risk is limited to the cost of owning the contract. The buyer pays that<br \/>\nfixed cost and has the right to exercise the contract by or at expiration under specific circumstances.<br \/>\nWe\u2019ll come to a clear example in a moment.<\/p>\n<p>But the risk to a seller can be substantial. An option seller may be taking in a relatively small premium<br \/>\nand agreeing to act as either the buyer or seller to the owner of the option contract. If the contract<br \/>\nowner proves correct and has locked in at a better price to buy or sell, it may cost the option seller more<br \/>\nin the open market to fulfill his obligation to sell shares to the contract owner unless the seller holds the<br \/>\nshares. An unhedged seller of call options could feasibly face unlimited losses. For that reasons, options<br \/>\ntrading is not suitable for all investors. More on what hedging is at a later point.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Types of options<\/strong> &#8211; While an option contract can be bought or sold, there are two types of options. Call<br \/>\noptions give the buyer that right to buy shares at a fixed price. A seller of call options expects the share<br \/>\nprice to remain below a specific price through an agreed upon date and time, and accepts a premium for<br \/>\nbearing the risk that it does not.<\/p>\n<p>Put options give the buyer that right to sell shares at a fixed price. A seller of put options expects the<br \/>\nshare price to remain above a specific price through an agreed upon date and time, and accepts a<br \/>\npremium for bearing the risk that it does not.<\/p>\n<p><strong>TWS Option Chain<\/strong> &#8211; Let\u2019s look at TWS Mosaic and think about the basic concept of options and then<br \/>\nwe\u2019ll look at a quote monitor for option prices. We can do that by looking to the right of the Order Entry<br \/>\npanel and selecting from the dropdown menu \u2013 Option Chain. You can learn quite a bit about the key<br \/>\nconcepts of options by studying this panel.<\/p>\n<p><strong>TWS Option Chain Layout<\/strong> &#8211; Notice down the middle of the panel is a color-coded area displaying the<br \/>\nStrike prices. Remember we mentioned earlier the agreed upon fixed levels for option contracts? These<br \/>\nare known as the strike prices and can be compared to the underlying price of the shares we are looking<br \/>\nat. To the left are premiums or quotes for Call options \u2013 contracts to buy a fixed amount of shares at<br \/>\nthat strike price. To the right of the panel are quotes for put options \u2013 contracts to sell shares at a fixed<br \/>\nprice.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Strike prices and expiration dates<\/strong> &#8211; We also noted that each contract has a specific lifetime; these<br \/>\nexpiration dates are displayed as tabs above the series of strike prices. Click on a different tab to display<br \/>\nquotes for each expiration and then refer to different strike prices to see how the quotes differ. If you\u2019d<br \/>\nrather see a long list of quotes by expiration date, click on the Tabbed dropdown and select List View.<br \/>\nOption characteristics \u2013 time &#8211; If you compare prices of two identical call options with different<br \/>\nexpiration dates, you might quickly notice that the contract with the longest life is more expensive.<br \/>\nSimply, that is because the greater length of time increases the likelihood that the underlying share<br \/>\nprice could reach the strike price by expiration. You can see that a one month contract generally costs<br \/>\nless than a two month contract for call options.<\/p>\n<p>To see more or fewer strike prices, select from the Strike dropdown menu. To the upper right is the<br \/>\nTrading Class for the stock\u2019s options and the multiplier. The multiplier tells us how many shares each<br \/>\noption contract covers. For most US stocks, a single option contract covers 100 shares.<br \/>\nOption characteristics \u2013 strike price \u2013 You will also notice that call options at the same expiration date<br \/>\nwith lower strike prices are more expensive than calls at higher strike prices. Call options with strike<br \/>\nprices below the current trading price of the shares are said to be in-the-money. If they could be<br \/>\nexercised today they would have intrinsic value and are more valuable than call options with higher<br \/>\nstrike prices. Call options whose strike prices are above the current price of the underlying shares are<br \/>\nsaid to be out-of-the-money and would have no value if exercised now.<\/p>\n<p>The relationship for put options runs the opposite way. Higher strike put options are more expensive<br \/>\nthan those at lower strikes. Put options with strike prices above the current share price are said to be in the-money and would have intrinsic value if exercised today. Conversely, put options with strikes below<br \/>\nthe current share price are said to be out-the-money and would have no value if exercised now.<br \/>\nIn the upper left corner of the Option Chain window is the ticker symbol we have selected. Enter a<br \/>\ndifferent ticker or select from prior tickers using the dropdown arrow. If you look across to the right, you<br \/>\nwill see the live quote, dollar and percent change on the session and a series of configuration icons.<br \/>\nIf you ever get lost with this panel, click on the question mark symbol to boot up the Cheatsheet.<\/p>\n<p>Use the color chain to group windows together. Currently this window is grouped to other panels on this<br \/>\npage \u2013 so when I select any other ticker, the Option Chain will display option chains for that stock.<br \/>\nUse the pushpin to keep the window on top of others. Remember that you could unlock the layout and<br \/>\nadd this panel permanently if you want to. Or select option-dedicated layouts from the Layout Library.<\/p>\n<p>The dropdown arrow allows users to minimize all TWS windows or print specific panels. In the upper<br \/>\nright corner are reduce, expand and close icons. By the way \u2013 you can also access the Option Chain from<br \/>\nthe Blue New Window button in the upper left corner of Mosaic by selecting it from the Quotes menu.<br \/>\nConfiguration &#8211; Let\u2019s look at the Configuration wrench. Click it and you can either change the font size or<br \/>\nelse go into configuration settings. With the Option Chain header expanded on the left panel, you will<br \/>\nsee three selections for Settings, Hotkeys and Layout.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Settings<\/strong> \u2013 As well as altering the font size from the Settings menu, users can show option prices in<br \/>\nvolatility terms instead of in dollars and cents. As you learn more about options, this will become more<br \/>\nsignificant. Down the center of the Option Chain window are the strike prices. The Setting menu allows<br \/>\nusers to change the color scheme between blue, gray or autumn colors. The color gradient reflects price<br \/>\nmoves expressed in standard deviations. See that there are two selections to choose from in the<br \/>\ndropdown menu. Click Apply to enforce changes and keep the Configuration menu open. Click OK when<br \/>\nyou want to apply and close the menu.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Hotkeys<\/strong> \u2013 The Hotkey selection allows users to assign a single keystroke to create, modify, transmit and<br \/>\nrequest order cancellations as well as access various tools.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Layout<\/strong> \u2013 The Layout panel allows users to configure the Option Chain panel with more than the default<br \/>\nsettings. The left window shows currently displayed headers. The Available columns are shown on the<br \/>\nright. So for example, if we want to display a reading for delta in the option chain window, expand and<br \/>\nselect from the Greeks menu. Click and highlight the desired column header, and then click Add from<br \/>\nthe central panel to enable it in the Shown Columns. Notice the search box above \u2013 if you don\u2019t know<br \/>\nwhere your selection might be grouped, type it here to search. Let\u2019s look for implied volatility in the<br \/>\nsearch bar and add that to the layout too. When you have made your selections, click OK. The readings<br \/>\nfor Delta Implied Volatility are now shown in the display.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Implied volatility<\/strong> \u2013 Some stock prices are relatively stable over time and tend to reflect the broad path<br \/>\nof the stock market as a whole. Others are more erratic. Measuring the standard deviation of a share<br \/>\nprice over the past several weeks will provide us with a historic reading of just how volatile a stock has<br \/>\nbeen. This is an important concept, because option traders need to price option premiums and need a<br \/>\nmeasure of expected volatility. This reading of implied volatility is a crucial input to an options price. All<br \/>\nelse being equal, a stock with lower implied volatility will have cheaper premiums associated with its<br \/>\noptions than a stock with higher implied volatility. You can see readings for implied volatility on many<br \/>\nplaces in TWS. In the Option Chain panel, you can see the 30-day implied volatility reading for the stock<br \/>\nas a whole below the trading class and multiplier. But if you glance down the column for implied<br \/>\nvolatility we just added to the panel next to each strike, you will see individual volatilities by strike price.<br \/>\nNote also that call and put volatility readings are likely to be different.<\/p>\n<p>If we click on a random ticker symbol, the share price will display in the chart window. You can see that<br \/>\nits price has traded over the last year in a range of $25-$35 and is currently trading at $33. We can add<br \/>\nboth historic and implied volatility readings to this chart by selecting from Edit menu and selecting Chart<br \/>\nParameters. Investors may want to know whether shares have been more or less volatile than the<br \/>\nmarket as a whole, whether they have been volatile recently or where volatility readings typically trend<br \/>\nbefore and after quarterly earnings.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Call option example<\/strong> &#8211; Let\u2019s ignore the reasons why, but just assume that a bullish investor expects that<br \/>\nwithin three months shares in this company will be trading above $38. And so rather than buying shares<br \/>\nin the company, the investor looks to the option market to speculate.<\/p>\n<p>You can see the list of call option premiums for the stock. The 38 strike price is quoted at xx-cents for<br \/>\nthe three-month expiration. You will see that if you look at higher strike prices for the same expiration,<br \/>\npremiums are smaller. Remember that, for call options, the further away from the strike price, the lower<br \/>\nis the chance the share price will rise that far. Sellers are prepared to accept a lower premium to take on<br \/>\nthat risk. The closer the strike price is to the share price, the greater the risk and so option sellers<br \/>\ndemand a greater premium. Click on the ask price for the call option. This causes the Order Entry<br \/>\nwindow to populate with the option quote but because we clicked the Ask price, TWS created an order<br \/>\nto buy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Strategy Performance Graph<\/strong> &#8211; To add perspective to the meaning of the premium demanded relative to<br \/>\nthe anticipated share price by this bullish investor, locate from the blue New Window button the<br \/>\nStrategy Performance Graph located under the Option Analysis menu. Use the pushpin to keep this plot<br \/>\non top or expand the plot using the maximize button to the upper right. This displays the expiration<br \/>\nprofile for the selected option.<\/p>\n<p>The P&amp;L plot compares the profit and loss profile today to the P&amp;L at the expiration date of the option<br \/>\ncontract. P&amp;L is measured to the right and the price of the underlying is displayed beneath the chart.<br \/>\nHover the cursor over either date line to view the associated P&amp;L labels on the x-axis. If you hold the<br \/>\ncursor at the strike price, you can contrast the monetary impact of time on the option position. Should<br \/>\nthe share price rise to the strike price today, the profile calculates the expected premium of the option<br \/>\nand so you can see an associated profit, relative to the current market price of the option. However, the<br \/>\nvalue of the option at the strike price at expiration reflects a loss, which is equal to the current price of<br \/>\nthe option. The difference between the two lines illustrates time value or THETA as it\u2019s known in Greek<br \/>\nterms. More on the Greek values in a later chapter.<\/p>\n<p><strong>P&amp;L for a long call option position<\/strong> &#8211; A long call position will incur a loss for the investor at expiration at<br \/>\nall prices below the strike price. The loss is equal to the premium paid for the option. This is because the<br \/>\ninvestor paid a fixed premium for the option that is worthless at or below the strike price. The long call<br \/>\nprofile reaches breakeven at the strike price plus the premium paid. For example, for an option with a<br \/>\n$35 strike price and a $1 premium, the investor would breakeven at $36. At expiration, the investor can<br \/>\n\u201ccall\u201d shares from the option seller at that fixed price of $35 per share. If the investor paid $1 for that<br \/>\nright, this cost plus the cost of commissions must be factored in. Beyond the strike price, you can see<br \/>\nthat the P&amp;L plot rises at a 45-degree slope, cutting that horizontal breakeven line above the strike by<br \/>\nthe cost of the option. So while each long call plot will look the same as this, that breakeven value will<br \/>\nchange depending on the strike price, premium, and commissions paid for the option contract.<br \/>\nPlease note that for the sake of simplicity we are not including the cost of commissions in the breakeven<br \/>\ncalculation, but you should be aware that commissions are an added cost and should be considered<br \/>\nwhen calculating break-even points. Additional information on commissions and fees can be found on<br \/>\nthe IB website.<\/p>\n<p><strong>P&amp;L for a short call option position<\/strong> &#8211; Let\u2019s look at the P&amp;L plot for a short call. Many investors sell<br \/>\noptions specifically in order to take in the premium of an option. And don\u2019t forget, you can buy back an<br \/>\noption at any time and so speculators might sell with the specific aim of profiting by buying back the<br \/>\nsame option at a later date. For the premium received, they risk having to deliver shares under those<br \/>\nspecific circumstances at or before the expiration date. If we click on the bid button, a sell order is<br \/>\ngenerated and the P&amp;L profile automatically populates the Strategy Performance Graph.<br \/>\nThis time the P&amp;L profile displays a fixed profit below the strike price. In other words, at all prices for the<br \/>\nunderlying below that strike, the seller has no obligations and gets to keep the premium paid by the<br \/>\nbuyer. If the seller has to deliver shares at any price above the strike price, losses occur. For a short call<br \/>\noption, the breakeven price to the seller is the strike price plus the premium received and the cost of<br \/>\ncommissions. So for an option with a strike price of $35 and a $1 premium, the seller starts to lose<br \/>\nmoney as the share price rises above $36 and beyond that point, losses increase penny for penny with<br \/>\nincreases in the price of the underlying.<\/p>\n<p>A more advanced version of this performance graph is available via the Order Preview window. Use the<br \/>\nAdvanced button to generate an Order Preview and check the Performance Profile box to view the<br \/>\nMargin\/Performance menu. Clicking this button creates the at-expiration Performance Profile. This<br \/>\nversion offers user-driven scenario analysis allowing users to see P\/L and Greek values for a given change<br \/>\nin the share price. Use the date drop down box in the upper right to select any date through expiration.<br \/>\nUse the selector in the upper left corner to select from P&amp;L or any of the Greek values. Note that at<br \/>\nexpiration, amongst the Greek values only Delta will display.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Put option example<\/strong> \u2013 So let\u2019s look at an example of a put option. An investor wishing to protect a long<br \/>\nstock position, anticipating a temporary share price decline, might consider buying put options to<br \/>\nprotect from losses. A bearish investor might buy put options just to speculate on rising premiums for<br \/>\nput contracts in anticipation that the premiums might rise should the price of the underlying fall. To see<br \/>\nwhat the Performance Profile might look like in such event, an investor could select a contract with<br \/>\nappropriate expiration date, click on the ask price for a put option at an out-the-money strike and<br \/>\nexamine the profile based upon those bearish assumptions. Once again, hover the mouse above either<br \/>\nline to contrast the expected P&amp;L at increasingly lower prices for the shares. The investor might not<br \/>\nwant to hold the position through expiration, rather he may want to see the expected P&amp;L 10-or 20 days<br \/>\nfrom today. Use the date selector to adjust the view and once again use the mouse to view expected<br \/>\nprofit or loss as of the new date versus that for the current date.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Charting option prices<\/strong> &#8211; When using windows grouping, note that the price of the option is plotted over<br \/>\ntime. You should note that since many options typically have a short life, the best display is over a short<br \/>\ntime frame. And as they can be infrequently traded, it is best to configure the chart to display a line.<br \/>\nStart with a one-week time frame and then work out in time to display longer periods. Use the Max line<br \/>\nsetting to get a full history. As with underlying shares, you can often get a good sense of whether the<br \/>\nstock is in bullish or bearish mode. And while you can see the range over time for the premium of the<br \/>\noption, remember that its price is influenced by the price of the underlying, the remaining time value<br \/>\nand the implied volatility and that because we are pricing premiums, these generally decay to zero for<br \/>\nANY option that is out-of-the-money at or near expiration For call options, contracts with strike prices<br \/>\nthat are above the price of the stock are out of the money and for put options contracts with strike<br \/>\nprices below the price of the stock are out of the money.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Building on the first few lessons in this course, this lesson introduces the investor to adding call and put orders to TWS Mosaic.<br \/>\nStudents will quickly learn how to load option chains, view different expiration months, view price as volatility, configure the display to view Greek values and learn how to access and interpret the Performance Graph for option scenarios ahead of trading.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":899,"featured_media":221487,"parent":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"contributors-categories":[13576],"traders-academy":[13126,13128,13132],"class_list":{"0":"post-175541","1":"trading-lessons","2":"type-trading-lessons","3":"status-publish","4":"has-post-thumbnail","6":"contributors-categories-interactive-brokers","7":"traders-academy-intermediate-trading","8":"traders-academy-level","9":"traders-academy-trading-lesson"},"pp_statuses_selecting_workflow":false,"pp_workflow_action":"current","pp_status_selection":"publish","acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v26.9 (Yoast SEO v27.3) - 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