Expert Guidance:
Evaluating risk and return
Home > Investment Choices: Stock > Evaluating risk and return > Using options > Hedging with options
   
Evaluating risk and return
1.Evaluating risk and return
2.What's investment risk?
3. Researching investments
4. Selling investments
5. Using options
Hedging with options
Managing risk with calls
6. Develop your investing savvy
 
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Hedging with options

If you buy a put option on a stock, you have the right to sell shares of that stock at the option's strike price, provided you act before the option's expiration date. An investor who has sold a put option on that stock must buy your shares.

If you exercise your right because the market price has dropped below the strike price, you can sell the stock for more than you could sell it for on the stock market. Or, if you prefer, you can close out your position by selling the option to another investor, sometimes for more than you paid to buy it. Either way, you limit your potential loss on the stock because you put some money in your pocket.

If you want to hedge your entire portfolio against significant losses, you can buy a put option on an index that mirrors your portfolio. If you exercise the option, you receive a cash payment based on the strike price and the closing value of the index. That amount should offset a portion of your portfolio losses.

Picking the right index

To use index options effectively, you must use the index that most closely matches the portfolio or portion of the portfolio that's at risk. If the index doesn't match, there won't be a correlation between the value of your portfolio and the value of the index.

Paying the price

One potential drawback of buying options is that they cost money and last only a limited period of time, usually a matter of months. Continuing to buy options to cover an extended period of time can eat into the return you may realize from owning the stock or stock portfolio to begin with.

But you can limit your financial exposure in a number of ways, such as diversifying your options among industry groups and expiration dates — the same core principle that applies to choosing investments.


 
Thomas J. DorseyThomas J. Dorsey, President and co-founder of Dorsey, Wright & Associates
         
   
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