LEAPS Covered Calls
LEAPS Covered Calls
LEAPS covered calls are much like other stock covered call options that investors can use to generate cash income in their stock brokerage accounts, but with one important difference. The difference is that LEAPS, or Long Term Equity AnticiPation Securities, have expiration dates longer than one year. An example might help to explain how to use LEAPS covered calls to your advantage.
First, if you are not familiar with options trading, a call option gives the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy a pre-determined quantity of an asset, usually a stock or commodity, at the specified price (strike price), on or before the expiration date of the option contract. A covered call option is just a standard call option where the seller is covering the contract with securities that are already owned in their brokerage account. LEAPS covered calls are standardized call option contracts with expiration dates over one year away, that are secured by the shares of stock that are already owned in the sellers trading account. Since each LEAP option contract represents 100 shares of stock, these covered options can only be sold (also known as writing a call option) based on full 100 share increments of the underlying stock that the option is being written against. For example, if an investor holds 200 shares of General Electric (GE) in their brokerage account, they would be able to write (or sell) 2 LEAPS covered calls.
The longer expiration dates that LEAPs possess give long term investors the ability to get exposure to long term price changes, with no need for a combination of shorter-term option contracts. Also, the premiums (price) for LEAPs are higher than for standard options in the same stock because the increased expiration date gives the underlying stock more time to make a large price move and for the investors to make a good profits. Conversely, for the investor writing LEAPS covered calls, they get a higher cash payment up front for taking on the risk that they may be called out of their stock over the longer time frame contained in the covered LEAP contract.
One other characteristic that an investor considering writing LEAPS covered calls should consider is that the price decay of a LEAP call option is much slower than an option with a much nearer term expiration date. For instance, if a call option with a strike price equal to the underlying stocks current price only has a month to expiration, and the underlying stock price stays flat, the price of the call option will decline to nothing over the final month of the contract. However, a leap contract will register a very minimal reduction in price over the same month, due to it’s longer time to expiration.
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Tagged with: Anticipation • Brokerage Account • Call Option • Call Options • Covered Calls • Covered Option • Covered Options • Diversification • Exercise Price • Expiration Date • Expiration Dates • General Electric • Increments • Investor • Leaps • Long Term Equity Anticipation Securities • Option Contract • Option Contracts • Options Contracts • Premiums • Price Changes • Price Move • Purchase Shares • Stock • Stock Brokerage Accounts • Stock Market • Stock Ownership • Stock Price • Substantial Move • Term Equity • Term Investors • Term Option • Term Options • Traded Options
Filed under: Options
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