Options are tradable contracts that investors use to speculate about whether an asset’s price will be higher or lower at a certain date in the future, without any requirement to actually buy the asset in question.
Nifty 50 options, for example, allow traders to speculate as to the future direction of this benchmark stock index, which is commonly understood as a stand-in for the entire Indian stock market.
At first glance, options seem a little counterintuitive, but they’re not as complicated as they appear. To understand options, you just need to know a few key terms:
Let’s make sense of all of this terminology with an example. Consider a stock that’s currently trading for INR 100 a share. Here’s how the premiums—or the prices—function for different options based on the strike price.
When trading options, you pay a premium up front, which then gives you the option to buy this hypothetical stock—call options —or sell the stock—put options—at the designated strike price by the expiration date.
A lower strike price has more intrinsic value for call options since the options contract lets you buy the stock at a lower price than what it’s trading for right now. If the stock’s price remains INR 100, your call options are in-the-money, and you can buy the stock at a discount.
Conversely, a higher strike price has more intrinsic value for put options because the contract allows you to sell the stock at a higher price than where it’s trading currently. Your options are in-the-money if the stock stays at INR 100, but you have the right to sell it at a higher strike price, say INR 110.