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Table of Contents

A Note from the Authors .................................................................................... 1 Some Very Important Definitions ...................................................................... 3 Understand the Basics (Options 101) ............................................................... 8
More Basics: Types of Options ....................................................................................... 10 The Beauty of Leverage ................................................................................................... 14

Time Value How I Learned About Time Value (Or I Should Say, Time Decay)............................................................................................................... 19 Understanding Risk .......................................................................................... 29
So Let!s Talk a Bit About Put Options .............................................................................. 30

COVERED CALLS ............................................................................................. 37 Important Tips and Terms ................................................................................ 49 Meet the Authors ............................................................................................... 53 DISCLAIMER ...................................................................................................... 55

A Note from the Authors


Before reading this guide it is important that you understand something, and were speaking to options traders of all levels, from novice to advanced. Some of this guide, especially the first half, covers the bare bones basics of options trading. We strongly urge you, no matter how much of it you already know, to read the entire guide. Worst case scenario, you refresh your beginner level knowledge, which will strengthen your foundation of wisdom. When it comes to options, you absolutely must have a solid foundation. Without that, the house will collapse. We speak with options traders of all levels, and you would be very surprised at how many people who are way past this beginners level eventually encounter confusion, or make a mistake that they never should have made had their foundation been concrete. So if you find yourself saying yeah, yeah, blah, blah, blah, I already know this or duh at any point during this lesson/guide, just give it a chance and read through it anyway. It wont hurt, and it will ensure that you will grasp everything that is discussed. Before we go any further, let us first just say that our #1 suggestion to you is to start by playing very small. You cant learn to ride a bike by reading a manual or having someone explain how to do it. You need to get up and try, but at the same time, you dont want to start learning how to ride a bike by entering the Tour de France. The best way to learn about options is to actually be in the game, just like riding a bike. And just like riding a bike, you ought to start on a very small level (with training wheels, so to speak). So after you get these basic concepts down, and you understand how options work in general, get out there and trade one option at a time. If you make a profit on your first three tries, dont go crazy and put a huge amount in the next few trades. Have discipline. If you lose on trade number one or two, be absolutely sure to stop what you are doing, take some time, and understand exactly what happened on the trade. This is crucial. But dont let it get to you! Keep pushing ahead with your education. What if Warren Buffett lost money on his first stock investment and decided to stop investing in stocks? He wouldnt be #2 on the Forbes 400 list.

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You may take some minimal losses and gains (dollar wise), but whether you are up a little or down a little, you will have learned several very valuable lessons, as long as you carefully review each trade after executing them. We hope that what we have written will help you, and if it doesnt, please let us know so that we may improve this guide for you and others. Without further ado, enjoy this guide that weve put together for you on the basics of trading options. Best,

Chris Rowe

Costas Bocelli

Ed Pawelec

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Options Made Simple


A Guide to Huge Profits Using Options
Some Very Important Definitions
Take a minute to read the definitions below of the two different types of options, which are call options and put options. Don!t spend too much time with it, but read it over once or twice. If you don!t completely understand it, just continue forward and as you read on it will all sink in. We will cover this part again as we get further into this guide.

Call Options
At a very basic level, a call option is a way to bet that a stock will go up in value within a certain timeframe, and generally offers the buyer more leverage than simply owning shares in that stock. Call Option (Buyer/Owner) This is a contract that gives the buyer the right to call (buy) 100 shares of the underlying stock covered by the contract, at a stipulated price (exercise price) sometime before the option contract expires (expiration date), in return for paying a premium to the seller of that call. Numerous exercise prices (strike prices) are attached to each stock. They generally go in 2 " point intervals up to 22 ", and in 5 point intervals above that level. Call (Seller/Writer) The seller (writer) of a call option contracts to sell 100 shares of the underlying stock covered by the contract, at a stipulated price (exercise price) sometime before the option contract expires (expiration date). The seller receives the premium (cost of the options) from the buyer.

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Put Options
Again at a very basic level, a put option is a way to bet that a stock will go down in value within a certain timeframe, and generally offers the buyer more leverage than simply shorting shares in that stock. Put Options (Buyer/Owner) The buyer of a put has the right to put (sell) stock to the writer of that put, at a stipulated price (exercise price), sometime before the option contract expires (expiration date), and for that right must pay a premium to the seller of that put. Put Options (Seller/Writer) The seller (writer) of the put stands ready to buy stock at a stipulated price (exercise price) sometime before the option contract expires (expiration date), and receives the premium from the buyer.

Leaving Las Vegas


Some people think that trading options is a big mystery, and that you!d have to be a sophisticated Wall Street trader to understand how they work. This really isn!t the case at all. Once you break through a few simple barriers of understanding, it becomes very easy. It took me my whole career to truly master options. When I first started working on Wall Street, I only knew what a stock was. The options traders were always these fifty-something-plus Wall Street veterans who had been trading every day for decades. I mean, even the experienced younger guys at the firm stayed away from options contracts for the most part. The impression I got was that

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they would only play options when they wanted to gamble, but didn!t have time in their schedule to take a trip out to Atlantic City or Las Vegas (it was always hard to pull these guys away from the action). Stocks were much easier for me to understand. I mean, the concept was clearcut, and I was spending all of my time starting business relationships with investors and building up my client base and career. I decided to stay in my comfort zone. But after I established myself on The Street with a solid track record and a strong money managing business, I decided to try buying my first option. I remember spending a little over $400.00 on a Schering-Plough $45 call option (I forget which month it expired). Danny T., an older trader who sat next to me (well, he was in his 40s, which at the time, I considered to make him one of the older guys), convinced me to do it. I didn!t know how or why it worked, but it worked well. The stock only traded up about 4 points (a 9% gain) for no reason other than the entire market moving up and I turned my $400.00 into about $750.00, because the option I had bought increased in value by almost 90%! Cha-CHING!!

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Wow! Well that was a pretty cool test! What did I just do again? Although this was a small trade, I remember being nervous (and excited). Next, I remember buying options on Capital One Financial (the credit card company). I bought the COF 40 calls (again, I forget the expiration month, but I!m sure that the option contract expired within a couple of months). I bought the option contract for $1.25. The stock traded 11% higher, from $40.00 to $44.50. That caused the option contract to trade 300% higher from $1.25 to $5.00. I was starting to grasp the true power of leverage. But I also knew that I ran the risk of losing the entire amount that I put into the trade, so I continued to play very small. After picking about 9 winners in a row (it was the 90s), I decided to do some investigating, and a lot of reading. I was lucky that the older and wiser traders in the firm really took a liking to me and wanted to help me. I think it was because guys like that always tend to root for the hard-working underdog. I!ll admit: I usually got some special treatment. I had only read about options when I was studying for my series 7 license, which is the license that you need to be a stockbroker. At first I thought to myself I wouldn!t dare put my clients! money at such a large risk, and there!s no way that I!m going to shoot craps with a business that I spent years building. In the 90s, every money manager was making their clients money. The clients rarely had any reason to leave their money manager and transfer the account for me to manage. But I was intrigued with the idea of finding an angle. I wanted to find an untraditional way of making money for my clients that would separate me from the average money manager. Options required me to think outside the normal zone of comfort, and I had learned that options weren!t always a craps-shoot. I knew that there were ways to reduce risk and protect profit, as well as to use them to speculate on stocks.

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I also knew that I!d have to learn through experience and make a few mistakes along the way. The mistakes I proceeded to learn from were common for rookie options traders. Once I got out of the rookie phase, I learned a few other important basic concepts. To spare you the pain of learning any hard lessons for yourself, I!ll list the hurdles that I had to get past and explain the 4 most important lessons that I learned:

Hurdle #1:

Understand the basics (options 101).

Hurdle #2:

Understand time value (and how to overcome it, and take advantage of it).

Hurdle #3:

Understand how to use options to reduce risk.

Hurdle #4:

Understand how to sell covered calls.

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Understand the Basics (Options 101)


Most investors know that buying stock entitles them to partial ownership in the company who issued those shares. In other words, you!re purchasing an "equity" participation in the company. Most stocks listed and traded on U.S. stock exchanges are termed equity securities. So what is an option? In a word, an option is actually a contract. (When talking about an option contract, sometimes people drop the word contract and simply refer to it as an option.) Unlike stock, however, an option does not convey to the purchaser any ownership in anything. Instead, an option contract conveys the right of its owner to buy or sell the underlying stock on which it is based. For example, you can have an option contract on IBM, which gives you the right to buy or sell IBM stock at a fixed price. An option contract is publicly traded, just like a stock. And just like a stock, option contracts are constantly fluctuating in price. As IBM stock fluctuates up and down, there are many different option contracts on IBM that are also fluctuating up and down daily. It is crucial that you get these essentials down before we go any further, so I!ll explain it again. The owner of an option contract has the right to exercise the contract. What do I mean by exercise the contract? If you have a piece of paper that says that you have the right to buy IBM at $50 (even though the stock is trading at $70), and you decide to exercise that right to buy IBM at $50, you have exercised the contract.

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Wall Street Lingo


Remember: When we say that we are long an option, it means that we own an option. We have paid money, we now own a contract we now own the right to do something. When we say that we are short an option it means that we have sold an option for our opening (initial) trade. We have received money. In return for the payment that we received, we made a promise to either buy or sell a stock at a fixed price. I hate to sound repetitive but we have to be sure that you get this - When you are long an option contract, you own the right to exercise it. - When you are short an option contract, you have an obligation if the buyer wants to exercise it.

The (option) contract owner has no obligation to do anything. The owner doesn!t have to buy IBM at $50. But if he wanted to, he could. That is where the word option comes from. The owner of the option contract has the option to exercise the contract, or to not exercise the contract. Remember: The owner of an option contract has spent money to buy the option contract. So it!s the owner!s choice, or right, to exercise the option contract. The obligation is on the seller of the option contract. The seller of the option contract has received a payment. The person who has sold the option contract to the buyer/owner has the obligation to fulfill the terms of the option contract if the owner decides to

exercise the option.

CALL LONG (owner) SHORT (seller) Right to Buy Obligation to Sell

PUT Right to Sell Obligation to Buy

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More Basics: Types of Options


There are two types of stock options: 1. The call option 2. The put option A call option is an option contract that gives the owner of the contract the right (not the obligation) to buy a stock at a fixed price over a given period of time. Calls vs. Puts An Easy Way to Remember It gets its name from the fact that, as the owner of the option contract, we are able to call the stock When you own a call option, you want the underlying stock to away from the person who sold us the call option move up. This is because when contract, which means that we can buy the stock a stock moves up, the call option from that person (at a predetermined price).
moves up in price.

In other words, a call option contract gives its owner the ability to say hey, remember the agreement that I paid you money for? Well, I want to buy this stock from you at the price that we had previously agreed on. A put option is an option contract that gives the owner of the contract the right (not the obligation) to sell a stock at a fixed price over a given period of time. It gets its name from the idea that the owner can put the stock to someone, or to sell the stock to someone at a fixed price.

When you own a put option, you want the underlying stock to move down. This is because as a stock moves down, a put moves up in price. An easy way to remember this: You call up You put down.

A put option contract gives its owner the ability to say hey, I want to sell this stock to you at the price that we agreed on. So remember: in regards to either a put or a call option contract, if you bought it you have a right, and if you sold it you have an obligation. Now, do you remember where the word option comes from? Remember, when you own an option contract, you have the option of exercising the contract if you want to.

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Option contracts aren!t always exercised. In fact, the majority of the time, an option contract is purchased for one dollar amount, and sold for another dollar amount. Option contracts fluctuate in price just like stocks do. Therefore, they can be bought and sold like a stock. When you own an option contract, not only is it your option to exercise the contract, or not exercise the contract, but it is also your option to sell the contract itself at whatever dollar value that the market is giving it at the time.

First I!ll give you a real life example, and then I!ll explain the mechanics behind the concept.
I recommended to members of my trading service The Trend Rider that they purchase call options on a company called Suncor Energy. At that time, Suncor!s stock was trading at $52/share, and the options I recommended were trading for $15.20. When Suncor Energy!s stock hit a high of $80.00 per share on January 31, 2006, the call option that I recommended had traded all the way up to over $36.00 apiece. Now, if you had simply bought the stock at $52 on October 12, 2006 you would have been up 53%. Great. But if you had bought the call option that I recommended, you would have been up 136% on the same exact movement in the underlying stock.

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(Of course there were some much riskier call options that traded 900% higher within that time-frame if you were willing to take that huge risk, but the call that I recommended was much more conservative.) Here!s the difference between buying the stock vs. buying the call option: - If we had bought 100 shares of Suncor Energy stock, we would literally own a (very small) percentage of a business called Suncor Energy. - By owning a Suncor Energy 45 call option, we owned a contract that gave us the right to buy 100 shares of Suncor Energy at $45/share. It doesn!t matter what price Suncor Energy is trading at in the stock market. Suncor Energy could be trading at 38-56 or at 104. If you own a Suncor Energy 45 call option, then you own a contract that gives you the right to buy Suncor Energy at $45.00, even though the stock might be trading at a completely different price. Here!s a closer look at the trade in question: When Suncor Energy was trading at $52.00 per share, I send out a trade alert recommending the purchase of a year 2007 January 45 call option. 12
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This particular call option gave my Trend Rider members the right to buy the stock at $45.00 per share. The purchase price of the option contract that I recommended was $15.20. Here!s what the option quote looked like: 2007 Jan 45 call - $15.20

Always remember: One option contract represents 100 shares. That means that each one of those 2007 January 45 call options trading at $15.20, would have cost $1,520.00 to buy at that time.

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The Beauty of Leverage


Here!s another way of looking at it: When I buy an option, I am using leverage. Use this analogy: If I buy a house for $300,000.00, and I put down 10%, and mortgaged 90%, then I have only invested $30,000.00. If the house goes up in value by 20%, then the house would be valued at $360,000.00 right? So if I sell the house, that!s a $60,000.00 profit. Although the house went up in value by 20% (from $300k to $360k,) since I only put up $30k, I actually made 200% on my money ($60k profit on my $30k.)

How Buying a Call Option is Like Buying a House


Some people are confused by options, but the reality is that people have been using options for ages in the form of contracts such as real estate and auto insurance. One way of looking at a call option is drawing a comparison to a contract to buy a house. If I were considering purchasing a house, I would agree on the purchase price before actually purchasing the house. Let!s say in this example that I would put down a deposit of $5,000.00, and I would draw up a contract, guaranteeing that I could purchase the house at the agreed upon price. (When I put money down to buy a call option, I also receive a contract, guaranteeing that I can buy a stock at a fixed price.) But let!s say that a catastrophic event sent real estate prices down. I could find a way to back out of the deal and choose not to buy the house at that price, but I would lose my $5,000.00 deposit. If the house went down in value by $100,000.00 I wouldn!t worry too much about backing out and losing a $5,000.00 deposit. (Good thing I didn!t actually own the house, or I would be down $100,000.00!)

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But if the value of the house suddenly went up by $100,000.00, then the contract, which guarantees me that purchase price that we agreed on, suddenly becomes much more valuable. (I!d sure hate to misplace that piece of paper!)

How Are Options Like Pizza???


Here!s one way that you may have used an option contract long before you even got interested in the stock market
Does this look familiar to you? It!s a coupon! When buying a call option, think of the agreement that is made when a business issues coupons. Owning a coupon gives you the right to buy an underlying asset at a fixed price. Owning a call option gives you the right to buy an underlying asset at a fixed price. Of course you don!t have to use the coupon, but it is your option or your right, to use it. The issuer of the coupon has the obligation to sell you (in this case) the pizza at a fixed price ($10.99.) Similarly, the seller of the call option (or the person who is short the option) has the obligation to sell you a stock at a fixed price. If the price of pizza goes through the roof and now sells for $30.00 each, the issuer of the coupon can!t just decide not to honor the coupon. The coupon is a contract! The issuer still has to honor the coupon and sell you the pizza at $10.99.

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How Buying a Put Option Is Like Buying Insurance


When you purchase an insurance policy, you have purchased a contract that you pay a premium for. The insurance company isn!t giving you anything you can hold in your hand just a promise to fulfill a specific obligation in the future. If you!ve paid for an auto insurance policy, and then you crash the family car, the insurance company is obligated to take whatever action necessary to return the car to its prior condition. As a matter of fact, a put option is commonly used as an insurance policy on a stock position. For instance, let!s say you own 100 shares of stock in H&R Block, which was trading at $23.00, and you absolutely loved the stock. I mean, you believed with every fiber of your being that the stock was going to trade to $40 this year. But they were going to announce earnings in a week, and you heard a silly rumor that the earnings would be terrible, which would send the stock crashing down! A smart choice would be to simply hold on to your stock, but at the same time buy a put option with a strike price of $22.50. That would give you the right to sell your stock at $22.50 if you chose to do so. This way, even if the H&R Block stock traded down to $7.00 per share, it!s okay because you bought insurance on your stock (in the form of a put option) that says that you can sell the stock at $22.50. That!s a very simple example of how you can use options to protect yourself against losses.

Other Terms You Should Know


Below is an example of an options chain, which basically lists the options that are available on a particular stock (in this case, IBM). Although an options chain may seem like a foreign language to an options novice, as long as you keep looking at it, and keep trying to understand it, it will certainly become crystal clear to you.

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(You can find an options chain by clicking here) Let!s go over a couple of key terms Strike (or Exercise) Price is the price at which a stock can be bought or sold as specified in the option contract. For example, with the IBM April 80 Call, the strike price of 80 would give the holder the right to buy the stock for $80 per share. Where with the Exxon April 70 Put, the strike price of 70 would allow the holder the right to sell the stock at $70 per share. The Expiration Date is the day on which the option is no longer valid and ceases to exist. The expiration date for all listed stock options in the U.S. is the third Friday of the month (except when it falls on a holiday, in which case it is on Thursday). For example, the IBM April, 2006. 80 Call option will expire on the third Friday of

The next part of options trading that we!ll discuss should to be the easiest to understand: When opening a new options trade, you must specify that you are doing so by using the term to open.

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When you are closing out an existing options trade, you must specify that you are doing so by using the term to close. That sounds simple enough right? For example: If you think the XYZ June 15 call will trade higher and you want to open a trade by purchasing it at $3.00/contract, then you would enter your trade like this: I would like to Buy one June 15 call to open. Then, when the June 15 call option is at $5.00, you would close the trade by selling it at $5.00/contract like this: I would like to Sell one June 15 call option to close. Remember this similarity between stocks and options: You have the ability to either buy a stock first and then sell it second OR you can sell (or short) a stock first and then buy it second. When you short a stock, the idea is to profit by selling it, and then buying it at a lower price. You can do the same thing with options. The only difference is that you must always specify, when entering the trade, whether the trade is an opening or closing transaction. I will use this terminology in this guide going forward.

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Time Value How I Learned About Time Value (Or I Should Say, Time Decay)
When I was a rookie, I lost an obscene amount of hard-earned cash on a single trade for two reasons: Time Decay, and Greed ... I bought a call option at $4.00 to open. This particular option gave me the right to buy a stock at $100.00. At the time, the stock was actually trading at $101.00 per share (so the call option was one point in-the-money.) The price that I paid ($4.00) was based on two factors: 1. Intrinsic Value (which accounted for 1 point out of 4) 2. Time Value (which accounted for 3 points out of 4) Let me explain what that means. 1) Intrinsic Value The gain that I would automatically have if I were to exercise the option contract at that time is called "intrinsic-value." In other words, I had a "call option" that gave me the right to buy IBM stock at $100 per share. Meanwhile, the stock was trading at $101 in the open market. If I had decided to use the option to buy IBM at $100 ($1.00 below the price that it was actually trading at), then I would automatically have a 1 dollar gain on the stock. Said differently, the option that I owned only had $1.00 of "Intrinsic Value." So if I only would have had a $1.00 profit on the stock, then why did I buy the call option at $4.00? Because the option contract is worth more than just the $1.00 in profit that I would make on the stock on THAT DAY.

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What about the future profits that the option could potentially bring me tomorrow, or in a week or two? What if, on the following day, IBM traded to $112? That would mean that I could use the call option to buy IBM at $100, and I would then be up 12 points on the stock! That would be at least a 200% gain if I bought that call option for $4.00 (since I would have $8.00 in profit on the $4.00 investment). As a matter of fact, I remember that the reason that I bought that call option (to open) was because I thought that the stock would trade from $101 to $120 within a month (remember: it was the 90s), which would have given me a 400% profit on my options. (If the stock traded to $120, it would have caused the call option to trade from $4.00 over $20.00/contract. At that point, it would have been my OPTION to either use the call option to buy IBM at $100, OR to simply sell the contract itself at over $20.) Here's the problem: As time passes, time value deteriorates. (This is also known as time decay.) This is one of the most important parts of options trading that you absolutely must understand. Look very closely at the time decay curve below. Notice how the deterioration accelerates much faster in the last 3 months of the option contract!s life compared to the 3 months before that. In the 30 days prior to the option!s expiration date, the time value deteriorates rapidly!

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(Intrinsic value is not affected at all by time decay.) Although the stock ended up trading 50 cents higher (to $101.50), I lost 62% of my option trade in a couple of weeks. Let!s get back to my story of how I learned about time decay (the hard way). When the option had 1 day left before expiration, all of the time value had deteriorated. The contract was worth $1.50 because I could still use it to buy IBM at $100, and sell it at the market price of $101.50. I was left with a contract that was worth $1.50. Notice that the intrinsic value portion of the option was not affected whatsoever by time passing. Only the time value portion of the options price can be affected by time decay.

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I sold the call option at $1.50 (to close) and I had lost $2.50 on my $4.00! AAARRGH! How? 2) Time Value! Or, I should say, Time Decay. As time passed, my call option lost over half of its value. The call option expired, and after that, to add insult to injury, the stock hit $145 in a month and a half (of course). All I got from it was a huge tax write off, and a very expensive lesson. So expensive that, to this day, I'm too embarrassed to tell you the dollar amount that I lost.

Even though the stock traded slightly higher, I lost 62% on the trade! This is because the time value portion of the option price deteriorated. If this has ever happened to you, then you can certainly relate to the overwhelming feeling of frustration that I felt that day. Oh! I just had another grey hair pop out from thinking about it! So what went wrong?

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Let!s review: - I bought the call option at $4.00 (to open.) - Since the call option gave me the right to buy IBM at $100 when the stock was at $101, the call option was only one point "in the money." In other words, when I paid $4.00, only $1.00 (out of the $4) was real, "intrinsic value." The remaining $3 (out of the $4) was "time value," and was therefore at the mercy of the most inevitable event that we know of: Time Passing. So, since 3 out of 4 points that I paid for were time value, that meant that if the stock traded flat at $101.00, over time, my call option would have gone from $4.00 to $1.00, because once the call option had no more time left on it, the time value ($3.00) would no longer exist.

Don!t Make the Same Mistake!


Not understanding the effect of diminishing time value is probably the number one mistake that I have seen beginners make. If you understand how it works, you are ahead of the game and on the path to a much less expensive education. In my story, 75% of the option that I bought (3 out of 4 points) was time value. This was extremely risky. But there are always options available out there that have very little time value. Those less risky options are the only options that I recommend to my Trend Rider members.

Terms to Remember
The term premium just refers to the price at which an option is trading. So, in this case above, the premium was $4.00. Premium = Intrinsic value + Time value. ($4.00 = 1.00 + $3.00)

Intrinsic Value: The in-the-money portion of an option's price. In-the-money: An adjective used to describe an option with intrinsic value. A call option is in the money if the stock price is above the strike price at the time of purchase. A put option is in the money if the stock price is below the strike price at the time of purchase.

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Time Value: The part of an option's total price that exceeds its intrinsic value. The price of an out-of-the-money option consists entirely of time value. Time Decay: A term used to describe how the theoretical value of an option erodes or reduces with the passage of time. Here, I!ll show you how each one works with real life examples:

Here is an old alert that I sent out on December 6, 2005 to BUY: Citrix Systems 2006 June 20 call options. This particular call option, which was set to expire in June 2006, gave me the right to buy Citrix Systems at $20.00 per share. The recommended purchase price for the option was at $840 per contract. The stock was actually trading at about $27.00 at the time. See if you can answer these questions: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. What is the premium? What is the strike price? What is the intrinsic value? What is the time value? How much time did the option have before the expiration date?

Answers: 1. The premium is the price of the call option, which was $8.40. 2. (In the case of a call option) The strike price is the price that the owner has the right to buy the stock at, which was $20.00. 3. The intrinsic value was $7.00 because the stock was at $27.00, which is $7.00 above the strike price of $20.00, or $7.00 in-the-money. If this 24
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were a put option on the other hand, it would be in the money if the stock were trading below the strike price. 4. Time value is the premium (price of the option) minus the intrinsic value/in-the-money value ($8.40 - $7.00). So the time value is $1.40. 5. The option had a little over 6 months before expiration. I recommended the call option on December 6, 2005 and the expiration month was June. Remember: options always expire on the third Friday of each month (except if it falls on a holiday in which case options expiration is on Thursday). You should notice a couple of key points here: 1. In the trade recommendation, you will notice that my timeframe for the stock to do what I anticipated was 2-3 months so I recommended call options that expired in 6 months. Time value deteriorates faster in the last 3 months of the life of the contract, so you should always give yourself plenty of extra time for your trade to work out. 2. Notice that the stock was actually trading at about $27.00 at the time. The option was $7.00 in-the-money. That means that if Citrix Systems were to trade flat for 6 months, the lowest that the call option would trade would be to $7.00. Since the option was $7.00 in-the-money and had $7.00 of intrinsic value, only $1.40 was at the mercy of time decay. In other words, only $1.40 of the $8.40 that we paid would actually be affected by time passing. The deeper in-the-money that an option is, the less time value there will be. For instance, if I bought the June 15 calls, instead of the June 20 calls, they probably would only have had about $1.00 in time value (instead of $1.40.) But they were probably at $13.00 (compared to the calls that I recommended at $8.40). Now take a quick look for a minute at the actual trade alert that I sent to our members, along with the two charts that follow:

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Understanding Risk
So you see, when you buy options, you don!t necessarily have to try to make 400% - 3,000% profits while betting the house.

Instead, you can choose to trade a more conservative option that puts you at less risk, but still gives you above average return! The reason I focus on this part is that I want to dispel a myth. Many people think that buying options is a game where you invest a very small amount of money, and either you make hundreds or thousands of percentage points, OR, you lose everything. Let!s change the numbers around a little bit here. Here is an example of a super risky craps-shoot type of options strategy: Citrix Systems is at $27.00 Joe thinks that it trades to $35.00 Joe buys the June 30 calls to open (which are out-of-the-money since the stock is not trading over the strike price of $30.00) The calls cost $2.00 (which is 100% time value.)

Now if Joe is right and the stock hits $35.00, then his options will go from $2.00 to over $5.00, netting him more than a 150% gain. Heck, if the stock rips to $40.00, it!s a grand slam home run because he!ll make 500%. Nice to think about, huh? But if Joe is wrong and the stock trades flat, his call option will lose value each week especially in the three months before the option expires and very rapidly in the last 30 days, until the option is worthless. In this case, the stock could trade a few points higher, but if it takes a few months to do so, the option could actually end up at the same price, or even lower! Joe is putting his entire investment at great risk. The option that he bought at $2.00 was all time value. Even if Citrix Systems traded to $31.00, if it happened close to the expiration date, the option could end up somewhere around $1.00! (No lucky seven for Joe. Actually, I think his odds are better at the craps table.) 29
Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

At this point I must apologize. I realize that in most of my examples, I!ve used call options to explain each concept. It!s just that in all my years of having thousands of conversations about options, I found that people have an easier time grasping the concept with call options first, and put options second.

So Lets Talk a Bit About Put Options


Put options are basically the opposite of call options. Remember: Put options give you the right to SELL a stock at a fixed price. A person buys a put option (to open) for one of two reasons: 1) As a Bearish Strategy: The person is betting that the underlying stock is going to trade lower. Generally, when a stock trades down, a put trades up. 2) As Insurance: If a person owns XYZ stock and is concerned that the stock might trade much lower, but doesn!t want to sell that stock. If the stock trades down, the person can still sell XYZ stock at the fixed/agreed on price. Let!s look at a real life example:

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Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

CAI 2006 March 70.00 Put options


This particular put option, which expired in March 2006, gave me the right to SELL Caci International Inc at $70.00 per share. Our recommended purchase price of the put option was at $12.25. The stock was actually trading at about $58.75 at the time. See if you can answer these questions: 1) What is the premium? 2) What is the strike price? 3) What is the intrinsic value? 4) What is the time value? 5) How much time did the option have before the expiration date?

Answers:

1) The premium is the price of the put option which was $12.25. 2) (In the case of a put option) The strike price is the price that owner of the put option, has the right to sell the stock at, which was $70.00. 3) The intrinsic value was $11.25 because the stock was at $58.75, which is $11.25 below the strike price of $70.00. This means that this put option is $11.25 in-the-money. Remember: a put option is in the money by the amount that the stock is trading BELOW the strike price. A call option is in the money by the amount that the stock is trading ABOVE the strike price. 4) Time value is the premium (price of the option) minus the intrinsic value ($12.25 - $11.25.) So the time value is $1.00. 5) The option had about 5 months before expiration. I recommended the put option on October 21, 2005 and the expiration month was March. Remember: options always expire on the third Friday of each month (except if it falls on a holiday in which case options expiration is on Thursday.) -My recommended purchase price for this option was $12.25. -The stock was actually trading at about $58.75 at the time. -Remember: we will profit if the stock trades lower. You should notice a couple of key points here: 31
Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

1) On this trade I had a very short-term time frame. You!ll notice that in the Trade Alert (see below), I spoke about the negative technical picture of the stock and the negative trend that the computer sector as a whole was in. But you will also see that I mentioned that the company was scheduled to report earnings in a week. It is important to notice that, although I had a short-term time frame on this trade, I still recommended that The Trend Rider members buy the put options that expire in 5 months. This way, I would have a nice pillow of time for the stock to do what I wanted, in case my timing was off. 2) Once again, I recommended put options that were deep in-the-money, so that the time value would be minimal. I hate to see time decay ruin a good trade. In this example, the put option only had 1 point of time value. That means the most that I could lose due to time passing was $1.00. Now take a quick look for a minute at the actual trade alert that I sent to my members:

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Watch what happened here


Here!s what the stock!s chart looked like when I made the recommendation:

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And here!s what ended up happening:

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VERY IMPORTANT NOTE: When you think that a stock will trade lower, these are two ways that you can try to make a profit. 1. You can short the stock: Here you are putting up at least " of the entire dollar amount of the transaction. In other words, if you wanted to short 1,000 shares of CAI at $58.75, you would have to put up $29,375.00 minimum, or the full $58,750.00. That isn!t even the bad part. When you BUY a stock, you know that the worst thing that can happen is it goes to zero. Your risk is limited to the dollar amount that you have invested. But the reason that most people shy away from shorting a stock, is that you have an unlimited risk! That!s right. For every dollar that the stock trades higher (when you are short 1,000 shares) you are losing $1,000.00. What if the stock is WallMart in 1997, or Microsoft in 1990? You could end up with a disaster on your hands. When you short a stock, if you are wrong and the stock trades much higher, you could end up owing your firm money, and your broker could sell out your other positions to cover the debt in the account! Okay, maybe that!s a little extreme. Even if you didn!t happen to short today!s 1990 Microsoft what if you shorted CAI at $58.75 and they got acquired by another company at $85 the next day? You would lose $26.25 per share, or $26,250.00. 2. The alternative is buying a put option (to open): In our case, CAI worked the way we wanted it to. It traded lower. We made about 32.2%, over 3 times the percentage returns that we would have made by shorting the stock. What if the stock went the wrong way? At least we know that our risk is limited to the dollar amount that we had invested (in this case $12.25.) There is one more major benefit to trading options that I!ll show you, and then I have to get back to researching more trades for our members.

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COVERED CALLS
The seller (aka the writer) of covered calls is generally interested in capturing the premium income of the call option, and is willing to give up the stock at the exercise price if the buyer of the call chooses to exercise the contract and take the stock. First, think about what the average stock trader does in this example: Say you are the average stockholder who doesn!t sell covered calls. You buy 1,000 shares of Bob!s car wash (BOBC) at $50.00 per share. The stock trades eight points higher, to $58.00 per share. You say to yourself if this stock gets to $60.00 per share, I!m going to sell it! So far you are up $8,000.00. There are four possibilities: 1. BOBC trades to $60.00+, and you net a profit of $10,000.00 HORRAY! 2. BOBC trades down and you watch your $8,000.00 profit shrink FOOWEY! 3. BOBC doesn!t trade up or down, but sideways ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ. 4. BOBC trades somewhere between $58 and $59.99 and you sit there biting your nails wondering what your fate will be. Will you be rewarded for standing your ground, or will you be swimming in regret, after seeing your profit dwindle away? Guess what! Either way you slice it, you have just left money on the table!!! When you sell covered calls, you are grabbing that extra money off the table and putting it in your pocket. You are increasing your potential profit, and you are reducing your risk. So why doesn!t everyone sell covered calls? No, I!m asking you, because I really don!t know the answer. Let!s look at the example again. You bought BOBC at $50. The stock has traded up to $58. You can either decide not to sell covered calls and say if it gets to $60 I!ll sell it and make 10 points, OR you can sell someone the right to buy your stock at $60.00 and receive a few extra bucks by selling a call option contract on BOBC. 37
Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

If you don!t sell covered calls, then you are basically going to do what most people do: If the stock hits your target, you!re going to sell the stock at $60.00 (free of charge). What you could have done is have someone pay you money, if you promise that they can be the one to buy your stock at $60.00 and yes, this is legal! For instance: Imagine that after buying BOBC at $50, it traded up to $58. Since you can see that the stock is approaching your intended sell price of $60.00/share, you sell the June 60 call for $2.00/share (to open.) - Notice that when you sell (or write) covered calls, you will sell the call to open. Some anonymous investor basically pays you money for the right to buy BOBC from you at $60.00/share. If the stock keeps trading higher, and continues past $60.00, then chances are that your stock will be called away or sold at $60.00 at some point (when the stock is trading at a price higher than $60.00). Note: Keep in mind that the person who bought the call option from you has the right, and not the obligation, to buy your stock at $60.00. The only time that your stock is guaranteed to be called away from you is on expiration day, as long as the stock is in-the-money by 25 cents or more.

Comparison
Regular Stock Trade: Stock trades from $50-$60
$60.00 on sale of BOBC -$50.00 on purchase price $10.00 total profit

Covered Call Stock Trade: Stock trades from $50-$60


$60.00 on sale of BOBC -$50.00 on purchase price $10.00 profit + $2.00 profit on sale of June 60 call option $12.00 total profit

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If you do sell someone the RIGHT to buy your stock at $60 (which is what happens when you sell covered calls), then you are being paid extra money! Why on earth would someone PAY you for the right to buy your stock at $60, if the stock is only at $58.00? Why would someone give you extra money, so that they have the ability to buy your stock at a higher price? Sound crazy? Let!s use an example from the point of view of the buyer of the call option: Forget about selling covered calls for a minute. Let!s pretend that instead of being the seller of the BOBC call option contract, you are the buyer. You have bought the BOBC June 60 calls at $2.00 (to open.) (You!re a dice rolling, risk taking, gun slinging cowboy/cowgirl!) That means you have purchased (at $2.00/share) the right to buy BOBC at $60.00 per share at some point before the call option expires on the third Friday of June (remember: options always expire on the third Friday of the month.) As the buyer/owner of the call option, you are hoping that the stock continues to trade higher, from its current price of $58, up to (let!s say) $70.00 per share. If that happens, then the call option that you bought at $2.00 will trade to over $10.00, which will be over 400% in profit! But if the stock stays around $58.00 per share, and never trades over $60.00, the call option will expire worthless in June (on the third Friday). You are basically risking the entire $2.00 for the chance to make an $8.00 profit. It!s a huge risk for a huge reward. Now let!s test your memory: Do you remember the difference between intrinsic value and time value? Always Remember: When you buy options that are out of the money, you are taking a big risk, because the entire amount that you are paying for the option is time value. Time value is at the mercy of time decay. The BOBC June 60 call gives you the right to buy BOBC at $60. 39
Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

Since the stock is not trading over $60.00 per share (it!s at $58,) the BOBC June 60 call option contract that you bought for $2.00 (to open), has zero intrinsic value. When an option is in-the-money, it has intrinsic value. When an option is outof-the-money, it has zero intrinsic value, and is 100% time value. In this case, the entire $2.00 premium is time value. Time value is prone to time decay. Intrinsic value is not affected by time decay. So as time passes, the time value of the call option in our example will deteriorate. If you recall, the time decay actually accelerates in the last 3 months and especially in the last 30 days. (See time decay chart below) A Side Note: One of the most common mistakes that I see options beginners make (even options veterans for that matter) is buying out-of-the-money options, without realizing the level of risk that they are taking. What!s worse is that they buy out-of-the-money options that are going to expire within the next 1-3 months! Talk about stacking the odds against you! This is the difference between buying options that are cheap and buying options that are inexpensive. Here!s a picture of the BOBC June $60 call. Its two points out of the money (BOBC is at $58) so the entire premium (price of the option) is time value, and will be affected by time-decay! Watch what will happen to the premium if the stock simply trades flat (at $58.00):

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Why does a casino make so much money? Because there are millions of people who are okay with taking bets, even when they know that the odds are against them. Every now and again, the casino loses and the gambler wins! But does the casino ever really lose? I mean, is the casino really gambling at all? The guest, of the casino is doing all of the gambling. The casino is simply running a business. The casino knows that every now and again they will have to pay up. But the amount that they pay out once in a while is dwarfed by the amount that they collect from most of the other guests. Everyone knows that! But when you are the buyer of short-term, out of the money options, you might not realize that you are the same guy as the gambling casino guest. When you are the person who is selling (aka writing) covered calls, YOU are the casino! You are the one who is accepting payment after payment after payment, from the guy who wants to see his $2.00 BOBC call option trade up to $10.00. Once you have sold a covered call and received your payment, either you will keep the premium and your stock position, or else you will keep your premium, and you will sell your stock. BIG DEAL! Just be sure to only sell covered calls if you are willing to sell your stock at the strike price. 41
Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

Ideally, you want to sell calls with a strike price that!s slightly higher than the stock!s current price. It!s also okay to sell calls with a strike price that!s at-themoney (the same as the stock!s current price) or slightly in-the-money (slightly lower than the stock!s price. The idea is to profit from the decaying time value of the option that you have sold. Ideally, you also want to sell calls that will expire in 30-45 days because that is when time value will decay most rapidly. Now for the comparison: Let!s say you are NOT that average stockholder (who never sells covered calls). Instead, you have taken the time to learn about covered calls, and you now have the advantage of an easily acquired education on the benefits of covered call writing You buy 1,000 shares of Bob!s car wash BOBC at $50.00 per share. The stock now trades to $58.00 per share. You say to yourself: I would be willing to sell my stock at $60.00. Let!s see what the BOBC June 60 call options are trading at, because you know that someone is willing to pay something for the right to buy your BOBC at $60.00. You find out that you can sell the BOBC June 60 calls for $2.00. Again, the stock is at $58.00, and so far you are up $8,000.00 on your stock position... Remember these two keys: 1) Each option contract represents 100 shares. 10 option contracts represent 1,000 shares. So if you own 1,000 shares of BOBC, and you want to sell someone the right to BUY your 1,000 shares of BOBC, then you would sell 10 call options (to open,) because 10 options represents 1,000 shares. 2) Some people get confused about selling first and buying second. Traditionally people are trained to only understand buying something first, and selling it second. But when you write an option contract (or sell an option contract), then you are essentially short the option contract. You 42
Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

can first sell an option contract at $10 (to open), and THEN buy the option 3 weeks later at $6 (to close) for a 4 point profit.

So again, BOBC has traded from $50.00 to $58.00 per share. This time you sell 10 June 60 call options (to open), and you receive an extra $2.00. That part of the transaction is now done. You now have an extra $2,000.00 in the bank, no matter what happens to the stock. (Now take a look at the difference) There are four possibilities: 1. BOBC trades to $60.00+. Your BOBC is called away (sold) at $60.00 per share, and instead of $10,000.00, you net a profit of $12,000.00. ($10k on the stock and $2k on the option that you sold.) Special note: Your stock will not necessarily be sold at $60.00 just because it trades over $60.00. Your stock may or may not be called away at any time before expiration. If, at 4:00 p.m. on expiration day, the stock is 25 cents in-the-money, or more (which means BOBC would be at $60.25 or higher), the call that you sold will automatically be exercised, and your stock will automatically be called away (sold).

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Here is a quick picture of what this would look like

2. BOBC trades down. You don!t feel so bad because you picked up that extra $2,000.00. If you didn!t sell that call option, BOBC would have still traded lower, but your account would be worth $2,000.00 less than it is worth right now! Whatever dollar amount the stock trades down by, the decline in value is reduced by $2,000.00. For instance: If, after you take in that $2.00 premium, your stock trades from $58 down to $55, then instead of losing $3,000.00 in value, your 1,000 shares of BOBC would lose $1,000.00 in value since you will have been paid $2,000.00 for the call option that you sold. (If the stock trades down 3 points, you really only lose 1 point in value, because while the stock lost 3 points, you made 2 points by selling the call option.) At least you take in an extra $2,000.00, and you will be free of any future obligation once the option contract expires. (Or else you can just close out the call option position by buying the same call back (to close) at its current lower price (see below). Now here!s a fun twist: You actually have two choices if your stock trades lower. 44
Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

a) You can do nothing and maintain both the long stock position, as well as the short call option position until the option contract expires. b) You can simply buy the option contract (that you previously sold at $2.00) at a cheaper price. Imagine selling a gold watch for $2,000.00 and then buying it back from the person that you sold it to for $300.00. Not bad. That!s a $1,700.00 profit. As the stock trades lower, the call option that you sold also trades lower. That means that if the stock trades lower, you can always buy the call option (that you!ve sold), at a cheaper price than what you received for it when you sold it. This is a profit on the option trade that will reduce the loss incurred on your stock position. For example: If BOBC trades from $58.00 down to $55.00, then the call option that you sold at $2.00 (to open) may trade down to 30 cents. You can now buy the call option at 30 cents (to close). That!s a difference of $1.70. Since you originally sold (or shorted) that call option at $2.00, that $1.70 difference is a profit. Said differently, if BOBC traded from $58.00 to $55.00 the stock position lost $3.00 in value. But since the call option that you sold at $2.00 (to open) is now at 30 cents, you have a profit of $1.70. So the net result is that, instead of your position losing $3.00 in value, it really only lost $1.30 in value. Stock lost $3.00 Option gained $1.70 Total loss is $1.30 OR as I said originally, you can let the option expire worthless and realize the entire $2.00 gain on the call. In this case, if the stock traded from $58-$55, then your entire position would have lost $1.00 in value instead of $3.00. Stock lost $3.00 Option gained $2.00 Total loss is $1.00 After the option expires, you are free of you obligation. If you wish to do so, you can sell another call option and start the process over again. 45
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If you were to repeat the process over again, here is a picture of what it might look like

If BOBC fluctuates up and down between $55.00 and $60.00 all year long, you can sell new covered calls every month or two, and take in extra premiums over and over again throughout the year!

3) BOBC doesn!t trade up or down, but sideways. GREAT! As time passes, the call option that you sold (to open) is losing its time value. Since you are short the call option, this is a good thing for you. Basically, as time goes by with the stock trading flat, you are making money as the call option loses value due to time decay. If the stock pretty much trades flat until the option expires, even though the stock did absolutely nothing, you made an extra $2,000.00. This is awesome! Even though the stock never got to $60.00 per share, you still made $10,000.00 as you had originally hoped for! (You made $8,000.00 on the stock and $2,000.00 on the call option that you sold.) Meanwhile, there is someone out there who was in the same position as you, but since they didn!t sell covered calls, they are sitting on a $58.00 stock, wondering whether or not it will trade to their target price of $60, so that they 46
Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

can make the $10,000.00 that you just made with zero movement in the stock. The call option expires worthless, you now have two choices: You could either: sell BOBC at $58 and skip down the street thinking about how cool you are for making $10,000.00 on a stock that only traded up 8 points, or you could sell another call (to open) that expires the following month or two out. Maybe you can sell the July 60 call (to open), or the August 60 call (to open) and take in yet another extra premium. 4) BOBC trades somewhere between $58 and $59.99. GREAT! I can!t wait to brag! Let!s say, for example, the option expires worthless, and BOBC is at $59.00 at the time. That means that you made $2,000.00 by selling the call option (you had sold that casino guest the right to buy your BOBC at $60), and you are also up 9 points on the stock. If my calculations are correct, you are now up $11,000.00, and the stock never even hit your price target of $60.00! So the moral of the story is this: When you are long the option contract (said differently: when you are the owner/buyer of the option contract), Time Decay is your worst enemy, because as time passes, your option loses value. When you are short the option contract (said differently: when you are the writer/seller of the option contract), Time Decay is your best friend, because as time passes, the option that you sold (to open) to someone else, loses value. You can either buy the option back (to close) cheaper, which will result in a profitable option trade (offsetting your stock!s loss of value), or you can let the option expire which will also result in a profitable trade. If this covered call lesson has helped you learn something new, then you are probably anxious to get out there and write some covered calls on stock that you own, and start grabbing all of that extra money that you have been leaving on the table each month. But before you do, first consider this last possible outcome What would happen, and how do you think you would feel, if you wrote a covered call on BOBC, which obligates you to sell BOBC at $60.00 per share, but 2 weeks later BOBC traded up to $90.00 per share? Hmm. Before you read any further, think about that for a minute. Do you know what would have to happen in that case? 47
Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

Well here it is: You would have to sell BOBC to someone at $60.00, even though it is selling at $90.00 in the stock market. Now, that might drive you crazy, even though your original plan was to sell at $60.00 anyway. Ask yourself, how much of a loser would you feel like if you sold someone the promise that they could buy your stock at $60, only to see it trade to $90, 2 weeks later? Answer: You should feel like as much of a loser as the casino feels like when someone puts $2.00 in a slot machine and wins $30.00. The reason a casino is happy to give up a profit every once in a while is because they make so much more in the long run. I hope that I have given you a clearer picture of why options can be used as a way to gamble, but also as a conservative way to reduce risk.

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Important Tips and Terms


Tip 1: Always look at the bid and the offer, not the last trade. I have had many people ask me how an underlying stock had fluctuated up or down by a few points, but the price of the options contracts that are related to that stock didn!t move at all. Usually the problem was that when they looked at the option quote, they were looking at the last trade instead of looking at the Bid and Asking price of the option. Think about this: You may look at an option quote that looks like the one circled below, and make the mistake of thinking that you would only receive $5.60 by selling this call option.

I circled in red a call option that has a bid of $6.00 (which is what you would get if you were to sell the call at its current market price), and an asking price of $6.20 (which is what you would pay if you were to buy the call at its current market price). So why does the last trade say $5.60? Simple: Because the last trade was executed at $5.60. That trade may have happened a week ago for all we know. 49
Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

Maybe the trade happened during the same day, but the option has since fluctuated in price. When looking to see what you would pay for an option, or what you could get for the sale of an option, always refer to the bid and ask (not the last trade). It seems simple enough, but I hear this question all the time!

Tip 2: Buy deep in-the-money options. You may notice that some of the options that I used as examples in this report only traded 38% higher, or 120% higher. But what about those 900% and 2300% returns that you heard can be made on options? Isn!t this a high risk, high return strategy? The answer is that options have a reputation of being high risk, high reward but the truth is that it doesn!t have to be that way at all. It!s like the saying goes: It isn!t only black or white. There are all sorts of shades in between. Check out the Knowledge Center at The Trend Rider website (http://www.thetrendrider.com/view_service_knowledgecenter.asp), specifically the two articles titled In the Money Part 1 & Part 2. At The Trend Rider, instead of trading the options that either get you a 920% return, or a 100% loss, we buy and sell options in a way that is much more conservative by trading options with lots of intrinsic value. Buy purchasing deep in-the-money options, you reduce your risk greatly, but you can still achieve profits that are much greater than a stock will show you.

Important Terms
At this point in our lesson, let me take you back a bit to make sure that nothing got by you. In other words, don!t try to trade options before you understand these terms: Premium: Price of the option

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Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

Selling an Option: Writing an option contract. Just remember: When you sell an option contract (put/call), you are selling a promise. Imagine literally making a promise and accepting payment to write it down on a piece of paper and signing the paper. You are writing a contract and selling that contract. In the world of options trading, when referring to options contracts, the words Writing and Selling mean the same thing. Opening Transaction & Closing Transaction When opening a new options trade, you must specify that you are doing so by using the term to open. When you are closing out an existing options trade, you must specify that you are doing so by using the term to close. Remember: Just as you can Short a stock, by selling the stock first and anticipating that you will buy it back in the future, you can also short an options contract.

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You can either: buy an option today and sell it tomorrow, or you can sell an option today, and buy it back tomorrow. With that in mind, just remember that whichever transaction you do first, that will be your opening transaction, and should be marked to open. Naturally, whichever transaction you do second, that will be your closing transaction, and should be marked to close. The Bottom Line on Covered Calls When selling covered calls, the idea is to sell short-term calls (that expire in no more than 60 days), that have lots of time value. The reason is because you want the call option that you sold to lose value quickly. If you sell calls that have lots of time value, then time decay will work in your favor. Even if your stock trades flat, the call option that you have sold (shorted) will trade lower. Remember, when you sell a call option, you have the choice of buying the call option back for a profit. So you can: Sell IBM January 50 calls to open at $10.00/contract, on June 17, 2006. Then, you can buy the same IBM January 50 calls to close at $8.00/contract, on June 25, 2006. That would net you a $2.00 profit. ($10.00 - $8.00 = $2.00 profit.) I hope that this helps, that you have had fun, and that you are ready to start making some more money!

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Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

Meet the Authors


CHRIS ROWE At fifteen, a tragic accident confined Chris to a wheelchair for life. He realized two things: First, his life would be forever changed. He had to learn how to be independent. Second, he could either waste his life away in resentment or he could do something about it. He decided to fight, and worked his way on to Wall Street. After 9 years there, Chris was sick and tired of watching the establishment lie, cheat and steal just to make a buck off the backs of hard working Americans. He quit, turning his back on a career worth tens of millions of dollars, and cofounded Tycoon U, where he takes what he learned about options and technical analysis from the most successful investors in on earth and shares it with 250,000 other people like you every market day. Chris has a rare combination of battle-tested investing knowledge, and the ability to teach what he knows to anybody -- regardless of their prior experience.

COSTAS BOCELLI As the CIO for TycoonU!s new Profit Skimmer trading service, Costas has come roaring out of the gate with a 75% win rate, including winners of 108% in less than a month, 96% in 11 days, and 123% in just 2 weeks. Costas began his trading career in 1998, hired by Gateway Partners, an Equity Options Trading Specialist Unit, on the Philadelphia Stock Exchange (PHLX). During his tenure there, Costas gained valuable experience navigating the financial meltdown that saw the downfall of hedge fund, Long Term Capital and the Russian Currency Crisis, trading volatility levels that reached unprecedented levels. Costas became a Senior Equity Options Market Maker for the firm, eventually leaving to join a proprietary trading desk, making markets for large customer and institutional orders. 53
Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

Costas has over 7 years of experience making options markets and has trained and educated several junior traders on option theory, risk analysis, and strategy. With TycoonU, he enjoys helping the self-directed investor become successful through the utilization and understanding of how options can play an important role in achieving their financial objectives.

ED PAWELEC Ed!s trading specialty is what we like to call Big Game Hunting. He!s an expert at playing major corporate events such as takeovers, earnings surprises, and drug approvals -- events that he!s dubbed Price Shock events. As the CIO for TycoonU!s Price Shock Trader service, Ed has delivered profitable trade after profitable trade, including one for 67% gains in just one week, and an astonishing 174% winner in less than 2 months. Ed Pawelec has been active in the options markets for nearly 2 decades. His interest in options began when he studied finance in college. At that time, options were a very new instrument among listed financial products. His options trading career began on the PHLX in 1993 as an equity options clerk. He worked his way up and eventually become a successful market maker. In addition to working as an options market maker on the PHLX for ten years, he acted as portfolio manager on the buy side, and as an options execution specialist and strategist on the sell side. Continuing his financial education has been key to his profitable career. He received a CFA charter in 2008. The CFA stands for Chartered Financial Analyst. This is an elite designation held by fewer than 110,000 people worldwide. At TycoonU he merges his passion for financial education and enthusiasm for options trading to pass along the tricks and secrets most individual investors don't have access to anywhere else.

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DISCLAIMER
1. Tycoon Publishing, LLC, publisher of TheTycoonReport.com, TheTrendRider.com, and PointandProfit.com, is strictly a research publishing firm and falls within the publisher!s exemption of the definition of an investment advisor and is of general and regular circulation. None of the Trading or Investing newsletters, services or educational programs provides individual customized investment advice. The information we provide and publish is based on our opinions plus our statistical and financial data and independent research. They do not reflect the views or opinions of any registered corporate affiliate. We are a financial publisher and do not provide personalized trading or investment advice. Again, we are a financial publisher. We publish information regarding companies in which we believe our subscribers may be interested and our reports reflect our sincere opinions. However, the information in our publications is not intended to be personalized recommendations to buy, hold, or sell securities. As a financial publisher, we are not legally permitted to offer personalized trading or investment advice to our subscribers. If a subscriber chooses to engage in trading or investing that he or she does not fully understand, we may not advise the subscriber on what to do to salvage a position gone wrong. We also may not address winning positions or personal trading or investing ideas with subscribers. Therefore, subscribers will need to depend on their own mastery of the details of trading and investing in order to handle problematic situations that may arise, including the consultation of their own brokers and advisors as they deem appropriate. Profits can be lost if they are not taken at the right time. Subscribers are advised to take profits at whatever point they deem optimal, regardless of the profit target set in any given recommendation. Publications such as those we offer provide recommendations. Subscribers are free to follow the recommendation, follow it in part, or ignore it altogether. If a subscriber believes a given profit is at risk, the subscriber should take the profit. Similarly, if a subscriber feels a position is likely to lose value, or a losing position is likely to fall further, the subscriber can choose to exit at any time to preserve capital. The final decision as to when to take profits remains in the sole discretion of the subscriber, keeping in mind that profits can be lost if they are not taken at the right time. TheTrendRider.com publishes a model portfolio of stocks and options chosen by its author/s in accordance with their investment strategy. Your actual results may differ from results reported for the model portfolio for many reasons, including, without limitation: (i) performance results for the model portfolio do not reflect actual trading commissions that you may incur; (ii) performance results for the model portfolio do not account for the impact, if any, of certain market factors, such as lack of liquidity, that may affect your results; (iii) the stocks and options chosen for the model portfolio may be volatile, and although the "purchase" or "sale" of a security in the model portfolio will not be effected in the model portfolio until confirmation that the email alert has been sent to subscribers, delivery delays and other factors may cause the price you obtain to differ substantially from the price at the time the alert was sent; and (iv) the prices of stocks and options in the model portfolio at the point in time you begin subscribing to TheTrendRider.com may be higher than such prices at the time such stocks or options were chosen for inclusion in the model portfolio. Past results are not indicative of future performance/results. The Trend Rider, and any educational material created by Christopher Rowe including, but not limited to Options Trading Simplified contains Mr. Rowe!s own opinions, and none of the information contained therein constitutes a recommendation by Mr. Rowe or TheTrendRider.com that any particular security, portfolio of securities, transaction, or investment strategy is suitable for any specific person. You further understand that Mr. Rowe will not advise you personally concerning the nature, potential, value or suitability of any particular security, portfolio of securities, transaction, investment strategy or other matter. To the extent any of the information contained in TheTrendRider.com may be deemed to be investment advice, such information is impersonal and not tailored to the investment needs of any specific person. Mr. Rowe!s past results are not necessarily indicative of future performance. PLEASE DO NOT EMAIL MR. ROWE SEEKING PERSONALIZED INVESTMENT ADVICE. THIS IS NOT SOMETHING THAT HE CAN PROVIDE. All securities trading, whether in stocks, options, or other investment vehicles, is speculative in nature and involves substantial risk of loss. You may lose money trading and investing. Trading

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and investing in securities is always risky. For that reason, you should trade or invest only "risk capital" -- money you can afford to lose To the maximum extent permitted by law, the Editor, the publisher and their respective affiliates disclaim any and all liability in the event any information, commentary, analysis, opinions, advice and/or recommendations in the Newsletter prove to be inaccurate, incomplete or unreliable, or result in any investment or other losses. Neither the Editor, the publisher, nor any of their respective affiliates is responsible for any errors or omissions in any Newsletter. The Newsletter's or Trading Service!s commentary, analysis, opinions, advice and recommendations represent the personal and subjective views of the Editor, and are subject to change at any time without notice. The information provided in our Newsletters and Trading Services contain material which is obtained from sources which the Editor believes to be reliable. However, the Editor has not independently verified or otherwise investigated all such information. Neither the Editor, the publisher, nor any of their respective affiliates guarantees the accuracy or completeness of any such information. Our Newsletters, Trading Services and Educational material are not a solicitation or offer to buy or sell any securities. Subscribers may submit questions to the Editor by accessing the Help section of The Trend Rider website. However, since the Newsletter/Trading Service is impersonal and does not provide individualized advice for specific subscribers, the Editor can only answer questions of a general nature about the markets or specific securities. The Editor will make every effort to answer subscriber questions on our website (www.thetrendrider.com) or in the member communications e-mails that are sent to members occasionally. Any subscriber who would like a copy of these Disclaimers and Disclosures may request a copy by calling 877-4-TYCOON or writing to Tycoon Publishing, LLC, 110 East Atlantic Avenue, Suite 230, Delray Beach, FL. 33444, Attention: Disclosure (whereupon a copy will be mailed or faxed to such subscriber.)

Don't enter any trade without fully understanding the worst-case scenarios of that trade. Trading securities like stock options can be extremely complicated, so make sure you understand these trades before entering into them. For example, aggressive positions in options have a greater probability of losing, while less aggressive positions are less likely to yield substantial profits. Similarly, far out-of-the-money options are unlikely to finish in the money, and options purchased close to their expiration dates are very high risk and, thus, likely to win big or lose big very quickly. Don't enter any trade without fully understanding the worst-case scenarios of that trade. RISKS WHICH ARE SPECIFIC TO STOCK OPTIONS TRADING When you open a stock option account, you should receive a booklet entitled "Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options," which is also available on the Chicago Board Options Exchange website at http://www.cboe.com/resources/intro.asp. This booklet contains an in-depth discussion of the characteristics and risks associated with stock options trading. We strongly encourage you to carefully read and understand this information. 1. Assignment of exercise to writers. As a writer of a stock option, you may be assigned an exercise at any time from the date of sale through approximately two days after the date of expiration. The consequences of being assigned an exercise depend upon whether the writer of a call is covered or uncovered, as discussed below. Since an option writer may not be informed of the assignment of exercise until up to two days after expiration, special risks can come into play. For example, an option writer who sells out their underlying position upon expiration may find out the next day that they have to surrender stock they do not now own. Risk of unlimited losses for uncovered writers of call options. A "naked" or uncovered writer of a call option is at substantial risk should the value of the underlying stock move unfavorably against the position. For a naked call writer, the risk of loss is theoretically

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Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

unlimited. The obligation of a naked writer that is not secured by cash to meet applicable margin requirements creates additional risks. A harsh adverse move in stock prices can create steep margin call scenarios in which a brokerage firm may liquidate other holdings in the writer's account(s) to cover the option. Since pricing of options tends to be magnified relative to the underlying stock, the naked writer may be at significantly greater risk than a short seller of the underlying stock. 3. Deep out-of-the-money options carry high risk of loss. Although purchasing stock options at strike prices significantly above or below the current market price can be very inexpensive, you are at high risk of losing your money. There are two versions of deep out-of-the-money options: A deep out-of-the-money call is an option to purchase 100 shares of stock at a price far above the current market price. A deep out-of-the-money put is an option to sell 100 shares of stock at a price far below the current market price. Although these options seem inexpensive, the chances of making a profit on such transactions are extremely low. Therefore, novice traders should avoid buying deep out-ofthe-money options. Out-of-the-money options near their expiration date carry a high risk of loss. The closer you buy an out-of-the-money option to its expiration date, the less likely it is to end up profitable. Although these options are cheap, in order to win in such situations, you will need precise timing and the occurrence of a major event that significantly moves the underlying future in your favor. Therefore, the risk associated with these options is high and you are likely to lose your entire investment in these positions.

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Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

Tycoon Publishing 110 East Atlantic Avenue Delray Beach, FL 33444 USA

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Options Made Simple by Chris Rowe, Costas Bocelli and Ed Pawelec

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