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Every week, Barron's has a section regarding options called "The Striking Price" usually written by Kopin Tan. Since we will be learning a lot about options and options strategies, I thought I'd post a recent article (using the method Andy taught us, which he has convinced me is legal!):
THE STRIKING PRICE
How to Play Garmin
By KOPIN TAN
AS A MAKER OF GLOBAL-POSITIONING AND NAVIGATION devices, Garmin has helped millions find their place in this world. But the company itself has happily strayed from the crowd.
While the stock market has struggled, Garmin (ticker: GRMN) has surged nearly 50% since Barron's published a bullish profile of the company ("Finding True North1," Feb. 27). Garmin shares even rose above the sea of woes that sank equities in May. But lately they've been laggards, even on days when the market surged.
Despite questions about the stock's potential upside, call premiums are rich as traders hope for yet another staggering profit gain when the company reports earnings Aug. 2. Pete Stolcers, founder of the option-research Website www.oneoption.com2, is among those who consider Garmin a good business whose stock already is priced to perfection. The booming market for personal-navigation devices augers well for Garmin's long-term prospects. But investors' brooding about sputtering economic growth, and a recent warning of waning sales from luxury boat-maker Brunswick (BC), all could weigh on Garmin -- at least before August options expire.
With the shares around 96, Stolcers suggests selling August 105 calls trading near $2.40. To cap losses should Garmin surge, the investor might buy further out-of-the-money August 110 calls trading near $1.30. The net credit of $1.10 for selling the call spread, viewed against the maximum potential loss of $3.90, generates a 28% return over four weeks.
Meanwhile, the selling of Microsoft (MSFT) options proceeded with great zeal Friday, after the software giant said it would buy back $40 billion worth of shares. Among its plans is a $20 billion tender offer to purchase shares at prices ranging from 22.50 to 24.75 by Aug. 17 -- mere days before August options expire. On cue, traders who expect the stock to be pinned within a 22.50-to-24.75 span, at least over the next four weeks, began selling short-term 25-strike calls and 22.50-strike puts in earnest.
Even as Microsoft shares jumped 5%, to about 24, its August 25 calls -- which convey the right to buy shares at 25 before mid-August -- fell a penny, to 19 cents. Michael Benhamou, managing partner at Louis Capital Markets, noted investors selling August combinations (for example, August 25 calls and August 22.50 puts), and using the proceeds to buy October 25 calls -- likely an attempt to catch an upward drift in the shares after a range-bound August.
Besides the tender offer, Microsoft also plans to buy back another $20 billion of shares before 2011. The colossal buyback fanned hopes that Microsoft shares would find a floor, prompting bulls to sell short-term puts to reap premiums and set targets at which they'd be willing to buy the stock.
By noon Friday, Microsoft's August 22.50 puts had tumbled 55 cents, to a paltry dime -- slim pickings for option sellers late to the game. But longer-dated puts still have some juice, notes Bear Stearns' strategist Marko Kolanovic. For instance, January 22.50 puts were trading near 80 cents. Sellers of these puts commit to buy shares should Microsoft slide below 22.50. But the premium earned drops the entry tab to 21.70 -- a 10% discount to the current stock price.
Kinetic Concepts (KCI) also sorely tempted option sellers. Since closing arguments were finished in its patent suit against BlueSky Medical, anticipation of the verdict had bordered on mania. Investors chased shares up 10% early last week, and bid up option prices so much that one-month options were projecting an annualized volatility of 126%. Even in their final hours Friday, certain July options were still worth dollars as some traders dreamt of a swift judgment.
J.P. Morgan assigns a 75% chance to a Kinetic victory. If that materializes, the stock could trade into the low 50s. But a loss could push shares down to the 20s. After the stock rallied to about 45, the firm's option strategists had suggested that clients sell July 50 or July 55 calls to pocket the outrageous premiums. That trade had worked out well, since July options expired before any verdict was handed down. Now, the attention shifts to August options, with shares retreating Friday as a deferred verdict looks likely. The company's August 50 calls were trading near $2.20, while its August 55 calls were around 85 cents.
THE STRIKING PRICE
How to Play Garmin
By KOPIN TAN
AS A MAKER OF GLOBAL-POSITIONING AND NAVIGATION devices, Garmin has helped millions find their place in this world. But the company itself has happily strayed from the crowd.
While the stock market has struggled, Garmin (ticker: GRMN) has surged nearly 50% since Barron's published a bullish profile of the company ("Finding True North1," Feb. 27). Garmin shares even rose above the sea of woes that sank equities in May. But lately they've been laggards, even on days when the market surged.
Despite questions about the stock's potential upside, call premiums are rich as traders hope for yet another staggering profit gain when the company reports earnings Aug. 2. Pete Stolcers, founder of the option-research Website www.oneoption.com2, is among those who consider Garmin a good business whose stock already is priced to perfection. The booming market for personal-navigation devices augers well for Garmin's long-term prospects. But investors' brooding about sputtering economic growth, and a recent warning of waning sales from luxury boat-maker Brunswick (BC), all could weigh on Garmin -- at least before August options expire.
With the shares around 96, Stolcers suggests selling August 105 calls trading near $2.40. To cap losses should Garmin surge, the investor might buy further out-of-the-money August 110 calls trading near $1.30. The net credit of $1.10 for selling the call spread, viewed against the maximum potential loss of $3.90, generates a 28% return over four weeks.
Meanwhile, the selling of Microsoft (MSFT) options proceeded with great zeal Friday, after the software giant said it would buy back $40 billion worth of shares. Among its plans is a $20 billion tender offer to purchase shares at prices ranging from 22.50 to 24.75 by Aug. 17 -- mere days before August options expire. On cue, traders who expect the stock to be pinned within a 22.50-to-24.75 span, at least over the next four weeks, began selling short-term 25-strike calls and 22.50-strike puts in earnest.
Even as Microsoft shares jumped 5%, to about 24, its August 25 calls -- which convey the right to buy shares at 25 before mid-August -- fell a penny, to 19 cents. Michael Benhamou, managing partner at Louis Capital Markets, noted investors selling August combinations (for example, August 25 calls and August 22.50 puts), and using the proceeds to buy October 25 calls -- likely an attempt to catch an upward drift in the shares after a range-bound August.
Besides the tender offer, Microsoft also plans to buy back another $20 billion of shares before 2011. The colossal buyback fanned hopes that Microsoft shares would find a floor, prompting bulls to sell short-term puts to reap premiums and set targets at which they'd be willing to buy the stock.
By noon Friday, Microsoft's August 22.50 puts had tumbled 55 cents, to a paltry dime -- slim pickings for option sellers late to the game. But longer-dated puts still have some juice, notes Bear Stearns' strategist Marko Kolanovic. For instance, January 22.50 puts were trading near 80 cents. Sellers of these puts commit to buy shares should Microsoft slide below 22.50. But the premium earned drops the entry tab to 21.70 -- a 10% discount to the current stock price.
Kinetic Concepts (KCI) also sorely tempted option sellers. Since closing arguments were finished in its patent suit against BlueSky Medical, anticipation of the verdict had bordered on mania. Investors chased shares up 10% early last week, and bid up option prices so much that one-month options were projecting an annualized volatility of 126%. Even in their final hours Friday, certain July options were still worth dollars as some traders dreamt of a swift judgment.
J.P. Morgan assigns a 75% chance to a Kinetic victory. If that materializes, the stock could trade into the low 50s. But a loss could push shares down to the 20s. After the stock rallied to about 45, the firm's option strategists had suggested that clients sell July 50 or July 55 calls to pocket the outrageous premiums. That trade had worked out well, since July options expired before any verdict was handed down. Now, the attention shifts to August options, with shares retreating Friday as a deferred verdict looks likely. The company's August 50 calls were trading near $2.20, while its August 55 calls were around 85 cents.