Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Sunday, Jan 04, 2004

Investment World
Features
Stocks
Port Info
Archives

Group Sites

Investment World - Derivatives Markets


Options guide

Call option: A call option gives the buyer `the right but not the obligation' to buy the stock at a specified price on a future date.

Put Option: A put option gives the buyer `the right but not the obligation' to sell a stock at a given price on a future date.

Exercise: Options on individual stocks are American and hence can be exercised at any date before expiration. Index options are European and can be exercised only on the expiration date

Call/Put premium: The price paid by the buyer of a call option or a put option is termed as the call/put premium. The premium is a one time outflow for the buyer of options.

Expiration Date: Expiration date is the day on which the option contract matures. The rxpiration date in the case of options on both the NSE and BSE is fixed as the last Thursday of the respective month.

Strike: The strike price is the price at which an option can be exercised. For instance the Nifty 26th July 1020 strike call option means that the investor can exercise the call option on the Nifty on 26th July at a price of 1020.

High Price — The high price refers to the highest premium charged on an option for the entire week.

Low Price — The low price refers to the lowest premium charged on an option for the entire week.

Average Close — The average close represents the average premium calculated from the last traded price on all days for the trading week.

Spot Close — The spot close refers to the last traded price of the underlying in the cash market on the last trading day.

Aggregate Traded Quantity — Aggregate traded quantity refers to the total traded quantity for an option during the course of the week.

Average Notional Value — Average notional value refers to the average notional value of a contract traded during the course of the week.

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication

Stories in this Section
Quiz


Union Bank of India's bill payment service
Tata Indicom's CUG facility
MTNL's new WLL services
Equity outlook for 2004: Top fund managers cautiously exuberant
2003: `Dividend dogs' beat active funds
Hold on to those PSU stocks
Software sector in 2004 — Gung-ho, but check the pulse
Index funds: Still the poor cousins
Templeton India Growth: Invest
Alliance Equity: Book profits partially
Monthly Income Plans: Sell
PruICICI Dynamic: More liberal expense structure
MFs: Quality disclosures needed
UTI Petro Fund: Buy
NIIT: Hold/Avoid fresh exposures
ACC: Buy
Tata Coffee: Book Profits
CRISIL: Hold
Ceat: Buy
Balaji Telefilms: Buy
Firm undertone in Reliance, HLL
Query corner
Positive near-term trend
Focus of the week
Question `n' Auto
Getting true value from used cars
LIC's Jeevan Akshay II
HDFC Standard launches two plans
What is current account surplus?
Buy... buy... 2003
Positive sentiments underlie Nifty
Capital requirements
Using futures/options
Options guide
Canara Bank launches `CanMahila loan'
Sundaram Finance: High on credit
Central Bank's gesture to senior citizens
SBI cuts deposit rates
`Integration critical in newly acquired units'
Taxability of interest from your PF
Preoccupied with a vacant house
Financial health is but balance-sheet deep
Shortsell


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | The Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | Home |

Copyright © 2004, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line