In the Money (ITM) / Out of the Money (OTM)

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Terms describing the intrinsic value status of an option relative to the underlying asset's current market price. A call option is in-the-money (ITM) when the market price exceeds the strike price. A put option is ITM when the market price is below the strike price. Options are out-of-the-money (OTM) when they have no intrinsic value (opposite conditions), and at-the-money (ATM) when the market price equals the strike price. Only ITM options have intrinsic value and are typically exercised.

Example

An investor holds a call option with a $50 strike when the stock trades at $55. This call is $5 in-the-money (market $55 > strike $50), with $5 intrinsic value. Conversely, a put option with a $60 strike on the same $55 stock is $5 in-the-money (market $55 < strike $60). A call with a $60 strike would be $5 out-of-the-money (no intrinsic value), and an option with a $55 strike would be at-the-money (market = strike).

Common Confusion

Students frequently reverse the conditions for calls vs puts. Remember: calls profit when prices rise (ITM when market > strike), while puts profit when prices fall (ITM when market < strike). Another common error is forgetting that at-the-money options (market = strike) have zero intrinsic value despite being neither ITM nor OTM. Students also confuse intrinsic value (ITM amount) with total option premium (intrinsic value + time value). Finally, many forget that OTM options can still have significant value due to time value, especially if expiration is far away.

How This Is Tested

  • Determining whether a call or put option is ITM, ATM, or OTM given market price and strike price
  • Calculating intrinsic value for ITM options (market - strike for calls, strike - market for puts)
  • Identifying which options would be exercised at expiration based on moneyness
  • Understanding that OTM options expire worthless if not exercised before expiration
  • Recognizing that only ITM options have intrinsic value while all options can have time value

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Marcus owns four different options on ABC stock, which is currently trading at $48 per share. He reviews his positions: a call option with a $45 strike, a put option with a $45 strike, a call option with a $50 strike, and a put option with a $52 strike. At expiration, which options would have intrinsic value and be worth exercising (assuming no transaction costs)?

Question 2

Which statement correctly describes when a put option is in-the-money?

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Question 3

An investor holds a put option on XYZ stock with a strike price of $65. XYZ is currently trading at $58 per share. What is the intrinsic value of this put option?

Question 4

All of the following statements about in-the-money and out-of-the-money options are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

DEF stock is currently trading at $42 per share. An investor is analyzing four option positions. Which of the following statements are accurate?

1. A call option with a $40 strike is $2 in-the-money
2. A put option with a $40 strike is $2 out-of-the-money
3. A call option with a $45 strike is at-the-money
4. A put option with a $47 strike is $5 in-the-money

šŸ’” Memory Aid

CALL = Can profit by calling stock away when price is HIGH (ITM when market > strike). PUT = Can profit by putting stock to seller when price is LOW (ITM when market < strike). Think: "Calls go UP, Puts go DOWN" for ITM status. At-the-money = Equal = No intrinsic value (market = strike).

Related Concepts

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