เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

naked put การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The seller's potential loss on a naked put can be substantial.
  • The naked put generally requires less in brokerage fees and commissions than the covered call.
  • The naked put is a neutral-to-bullish strategy and consists of selling a put option against a stock.
  • The naked put profit / loss profile is similar to the covered call ( see above ) profit / loss profile.
  • If the seller does not have sufficient cash to purchase the underlying equity, selling a naked put becomes a riskier proposition.
  • A textbook may state that writing a covered call is synthetically the same as writing a naked put, but in practice there are subtle differences.
  • It is one of the riskiest options strategies because it carries unlimited risk as opposed to a naked put, where the maximum loss occurs if the stock falls to zero.
  • A "'naked put "', also called an " uncovered put ", is a put option whose writer ( the seller ) does not have a position in the underlying stock or other instrument.
  • Since in equilibrium the payoffs on the covered call position is the same as a short put position, the price ( or " premium " ) should be the same as the premium of the short put or naked put.
  • A "'naked put "'( also called an " uncovered put " ) is a put option contract where the option writer ( i . e ., the seller ) does not hold the underlying position, in this case a short equity position, to cover the contract in case of assignment.
  • If the seller has sufficient cash to purchase the equity position, the risk of selling a naked put is somewhat less than the risk of holding the underlying stock or equity ( considering the premium gained and the loss from decrease in the underlying stock price ), while the benefit of the naked put sale is limited to the amount of premium gained.
  • If the seller has sufficient cash to purchase the equity position, the risk of selling a naked put is somewhat less than the risk of holding the underlying stock or equity ( considering the premium gained and the loss from decrease in the underlying stock price ), while the benefit of the naked put sale is limited to the amount of premium gained.