Options

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

Derivative contracts giving the buyer the right, but not obligation, to buy (call) or sell (put) an underlying security at a specified strike price before expiration. The buyer pays a premium upfront for this right. Options provide leverage and speculation opportunities but involve substantial risk, including total loss of premium. Suitability requires understanding of options mechanics, high risk tolerance, and speculative investment objectives.

Example

An investor bullish on XYZ stock (trading at $50) buys a call option with a $55 strike price for a $2 premium, giving the right to buy shares at $55 anytime before expiration. If XYZ rises to $60, the investor can exercise the option to buy at $55 and profit from the $5 difference (minus the $2 premium). Alternatively, a conservative investor holding 100 shares of ABC stock buys a put option with a $45 strike as downside protection (protective put strategy).

Common Confusion

Students often confuse calls vs puts (call = right to buy, put = right to sell), or who has the obligation (buyer has RIGHT, seller has OBLIGATION). Another common error is not recognizing when to exercise (call when market > strike, put when market < strike). Many also confuse covered positions (owning the underlying) with naked positions (no underlying ownership), which have vastly different risk profiles. For Series 65, remember that options require specific suitability analysis due to their speculative nature and leverage.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying whether a call or put option is appropriate based on market outlook (bullish vs bearish)
  • Determining suitability of options strategies based on client risk tolerance and investment objectives
  • Calculating option breakeven points, maximum gain, or maximum loss scenarios
  • Understanding the difference between buyer rights and seller obligations in option contracts
  • Recognizing when options are unsuitable due to conservative risk profile or income-oriented objectives

Example Exam Questions

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

Question 1

James, a 42-year-old engineer, has $500,000 in investments and describes himself as "moderately aggressive." He has 15 years of investment experience, including stocks and bonds, but has never traded options. He expresses interest in using call options to speculate on a technology stock he believes will rise significantly. His primary investment objective is growth, and he can afford to lose the premium he invests. Which action is most appropriate?

Question 2

Which statement correctly describes the fundamental difference between call and put options?

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Question 3

An investor purchases a call option on ABC stock with a strike price of $60 and pays a $4 premium per share. At what market price does the investor break even at expiration (ignoring transaction costs)?

Question 4

All of the following statements about options are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

A client owns 500 shares of XYZ stock currently trading at $45 per share. The client is moderately bullish but wants downside protection. Which of the following strategies would provide downside protection for this position?

1. Buy 5 put options with a $45 strike price (protective put)
2. Sell 5 call options with a $50 strike price (covered call)
3. Buy 5 call options with a $50 strike price
4. Sell 5 put options with a $40 strike price

💡 Memory Aid

CALL = Bullish (you CALLed to say you are coming UP to visit). PUT = Bearish (you PUT it DOWN). Buyer = RIGHT (can choose), Seller = OBLIGATION (must perform if exercised). Buyer's max loss = premium only (limited), Seller's max loss = potentially unlimited (especially naked calls).

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: