ELECT 24 Top Ad

What to Expect When Your Options Are Expiring

Discussing options expiration, exercise, and assignment

Sep 20, 2024 at 10:00 AM
    facebook X logo linkedin


    There's more to option trading than just picking the proper strike price. Once a position has been established, it's important for option players to know what courses of action are available so they can work to proliferate profits, or limit their losses, by the time the options expire. Below, we'll discuss options expiration, exercise, and assignment.

    Options Expiration

    Equity options expire on Fridays, on either a monthly or weekly basis. Standard monthly options expire on the third Friday of every month, while weekly options -- you guessed it -- expire at the close each Friday. So, for example, an October 100 call would expire at the close on Friday, Oct. 21, while the weekly 10/7 100-strike call would expire at the close on Friday, Oct. 7.

    If you choose not to take action on a trade by market close on the expiration date, your option will expire. For out-of-the-money options, many buyers will choose to simply let these options expire worthless, especially if it is not worth the brokerage fees to sell to-close the option. When this happens, the option buyer will lose the initial premium paid.

    On the other hand, option sellers are typically looking for their contracts to expire out of the money. In these situations, the trader who sold the option to open can pocket the initial premium received on the sale.

    Options Exercise

    When an in-the-money option expires, it will be automatically exercised upon expiration. But at any point within the option's lifetime, the buyer is able to exercise their in-the-money option to either buy (call options) or sell (put options) shares of an underlying equity at the strike price.

    As an example, say a bullish trader purchased a 40-strike call option on XYZ.  By the time expiration rolls around, XYZ is trading at $45 per share, and the trader decides that she would like to own the 100 underlying shares of XYZ, since she believes the stock will continue to rally. Before market close on expiration, the trader can choose to exercise her option and purchase 100 shares of XYZ for $40 per share, therefore receiving $4,500 worth of stock for $4,000.

    Or, let's say the speculator was a short seller who bought 40-strike calls as an options hedge. By doing so, she just established a maximum repurchase price on the shorted shares that moved against her.

    On the other hand, if a bearish trader had purchased a put option on XYZ for $50, she can then choose to sell the 100 underlying shares of XYZ to the put writer for $5,000, instead of the market value of $4,500. Or, perhaps the trader was an XYZ shareholder seeking options insurance in case of a dip. By exercising the in-the-money put, she minimized portfolio losses.

    Options Assignment

    Assignment is what happens on the side of the option seller when the option buyer chooses to exercise their option. For call sellers, this can mean having the underlying shares called away; for put sellers, it means being obligated to purchase the underlying shares of XYZ at the strike-price. An option seller can be assigned at any point the option is in-the-money during the life of the option, although the risk of assignment increases as the option nears expiration.

    Of course, there are other ways to exit an option trade before expiration, including the option to buy to close or sell to close an option, or you can adjust your position by rolling out, up, or down. As always, it's important to do your research and discuss your needs with your broker, and keep an eye on your positions.

     

    Biden’s government just announced a new government "stimulus program"...

    And it could hand you a payment for as much as $7,882 — each quarter.

    See, it has to do with a recent 19-page memo from Biden’s office...

    Directing the government to once again send a form of "stimulus payments" to the mailboxes of Americans during these difficult times.

    Better still, you can collect these payouts every single quarter — for life...

    Payments run as high as $7,882... And it only takes five minutes to sign up.

    I call this the "Stimulus Stipends" program…

    And Forbes recently declared that you can "retire rich" thanks to this program.

    So if you want to start cashing in your quarterly payouts — courtesy of the U.S government...

    Discover how to receive your FIRST "Stimulus Stipends" payment for up to $7,882 here. 
     (ad)
     

    election 2024 report

                                                      AD                                                  
    best AI trade you can make today…?
    (it’s not MSFT, GOOGL, AMZN or AAPL)

                                                      AD                                                  

     
     

    VOLATILITY SCORECARD

     


                                                   AD                                                    
    Crazy Opportunity!! Tiny AI Stock just $3
    “This Type of AI Will Be Worth “Ten MSFTs.”

                                                   AD                                                    

     
    4 AI STOCKS TO BUY NOW
     

                                                      AD                                                  
    best AI trade you can make today…?
    (it’s not MSFT, GOOGL, AMZN or AAPL)

                                                      AD