Optionable Stock

  

Categories: Stocks, Derivatives

A stock under which you can buy and sell options.

It means that some bank somewhere (or maybe all of 'em) is making a market in options, likely both put and call, on that stock.

So..."everyone" makes a market in options on Disney. Big, fat, liquid, well-known company that "everyone" owns. So something like 25 banks around the world trade options liquidly in DIS. Good for the customer; less good for the banks.

Why? Well, the more competition trading in a commodity, like a stock option on DIS, the narrower the spreads (or profits) to the banks.

So that's an optionable stock.

What's a non-optionable one then? Well, many stocks are just not liquid enough to be worth a bank setting up the infrastructure to deal in them. Lawyers. Technical systems. Committed capital and shares to back up the trades. The hiring of $10-million-a-year traders to run the desk. Lots of costs. Unclear rewards if a stock only trades, say, a few million shares a day. So they don't.

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Finance: What is Intrinsic Value (of An ...6 Views

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Finance allah shmoop what is the intrinsic value of an

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option All right this is brandi She owns a twelve

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dollars strike price call option toe buy a share of

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my fifteen minutes are up dot com a retirement home

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chain for reality tv stars who recently gained self awareness

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Well the stock is trading for fifteen bucks a share

00:26

of this moment Her strike price is twelve so the

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intrinsic value of that option is fifteen minutes twelve or

00:34

three bucks that is it is three dollars in the

00:38

money and if brandy converted it into a share this

00:41

moment and then immediately sold the stock for fifteen dollars

00:44

in cash well she'd make three bucks But there's a

00:47

catch per call option doesn't expire for five weeks so

00:52

that three dollars in the money is actually worth more

00:54

than three dollars because she has data or time yet

00:59

to exercise and convert or just sell the option itself

01:03

So it's worth mohr because well a stock might go

01:06

up from fifteen dollars in overtime Stocks go up so

01:09

in the next five weeks well couldn't go up a

01:11

dime twenty cents twenty five cents and make that three

01:14

Dollars worth three ten three twenty three Twenty five Sure

01:17

sure it could happen So yeah that's The difference between

01:20

actual value and intrinsic value You get seita kickers in

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there making the option's worth more than just converting them

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into stock and selling them right there And yeah it

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looks like our one and a half minutes are up

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