Hot Articles

The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation Report on Venture Capital Funds: A Cautionary Tale
MF Global and the Meaning of Chutzpah
Two Contrasting Views of Stock Markets
Planning for Retirement? Take Off Those Rose-Colored Glasses!
The Sizzle or the Steak: Exotic Market-Linked CDs

Books


Index Funds Book
Index Funds: The 12-Step Program for Active Investors (Hardcover)

by Mark T Hebner
ISBN: 0-9768023-0-9




see more books...

Harry M. Markowitz explains Portfolio Theory: what it is and how it's used from a top-down model from the asset classes to the investments. He covers Standard Deviation, Variance, Correlation, and Covariance. Markowitz also explains what happened in 2008 with Modern Portfolio Theory. (39 Min.)

Harry M. Markowitz - Portfolio Theory and 2008

Mark covers historic recovery patterns and probability of future returns, the risks and returns that come with big government, the role of commodities in your investments, the pros and cons of inflation-hedging securities, and an investment strategy that has been highly successful historically. (92 Min.)

Mark T. Hebner - Big Losses, Big Government and Your Investments

Harry Markowitz gives an IFA Exclusive Presentation on Portfolio Theory Vs. Financial Engineering, and Their Roles in Financial Crises. Markowitz explains the difference between Portfolio Theory and Financial Engineering. Markowitz also covers Black Monday (October 19, 1987), Long Term Capital Management, and Now. (47 Min.)

Harry Markowitz - Portfolio Theory Vs. Financial Engineering, and Their Roles in Financial Crises

The first step on the index funds journey is to recognize active investor behavior. If all investors were lined up in a row, could the active investors be identified? Active investors actively engage in stock picking, time picking (market timing), manager picking, and style picking.

Step 1: Active Investors - Podcast Interview with Mark Hebner

Mark Hebner explains the Nobel Laureates. Mark suggests a higher power of non-biased information from academics who carefully analyze data and have that data peer reviewed before it is published. Mark identifies the five basic concepts of the Modern Portfolio Theory.

Step 2: Nobel Laureates - Podcast Interview with Mark Hebner

see more investing videos...

In The News

The Venture Capital Myth
The Hidden Message in JP Morgan's $2 Billion Loss
The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation Report on Venture Capital Funds: A Cautionary Tale
Investor Confidence in UBS May be Misplaced
A Rational Response to Irrational Market Anxiety
Mal-location of Capital
Wall Street: the other Las Vegas


Quote of the Week

Sign Up for IFA's Quote of the Week

email:

'Safe' options: ETFs a good platform for their use

IndexFunds.com Staff
Thursday, June 12, 2003

Investors believe options are risky, and rightly so when they are used alone. But they take on a new light when an investor already owns an asset being optioned. ETF investors in particular can exploit their use to protect their holdings in an entirely conservative manner.

Want to lock in profits from a recent run-up in an ETF without selling the position and triggering taxes? Want to buy insurance against a drop in a shaky market? These and other defensive strategies can be obtained with the nearly 70 ETF options currently available. Although many large stocks offer options, trying to engage in many at once becomes a nightmare of expense, tracking and paperwork. ETFs make defensive options easy.

Options are the right to buy (called a call) or to sell (called a put) a stock at a certain price before a certain date. These rights have value and are themselves bought and sold on stock exchanges at prices that reflect the fortunes of the underlying asset and the time left in the contract.

A call is normally speculative because the option can expire as worthless for the buyer or the option may shoot up dramatically and expose the seller to huge losses. Selling calls when the investor is "covered", or owns the underlying ETF, is inherently conservative, on the other hand. It can be likened to the farmer selling his wheat harvest in July even though harvest does not occur until October. It is a time-honored and reasonable practice. The seller is pocketing the option cash as a way to lock in profit or to insure against mild loss. Selling uncovered calls, however, exposes the seller to unlimited risk since there is no way to know how high the underlying stock could rise. The following table shows some outcomes for a typical covered call sold for $10 for a strike price of the underlying ETF at $110 in a year's time, while assuming the ETF is currently trading at $100:

ETF at Expiration Profit/Loss calculation Difference from no action
$130 $10 ETF gain (ETF called at $110) + $10 option income= $20 -$10 since no action would have led to $30 ETF gain
$120 $10 ETF gain (ETF called at $110) + $10 option income= $20 break even since no action would have led to $20 gain
$110 $10 ETF gain + $10 option income=$20 +$10 since no action would have led to $10 ETF gain
$100 No ETF gain + $10 option income=$10 +$10 since no action would have led to no ETF gain

 

The difference between adopting this strategy and doing nothing depends upon just how high the ETF will rise before the expiration date. If fails to climb by more than the amount of the option income, then the strategy puts another $10 in the investor's pocket. That's an extra 10% return in the case of the ETF remaining flat or 10% cushion against decline. The covered call is well suited when the investor wants an income stream and is neither bullish nor bearish about a market.

The downside of covered calls is that the prospect of steady income can lure an investor into ignoring signs of severe downturn. If the investor is truly bearish, covered calls will offer only limited protection. Inversely, covered calls remove most of any sharp rise that may occur for the ETFs, so their owner gives up windfall profits, which made them unpopular in the boom years of the 1990s.

For deeper protection against loss, the options investor can purchase puts for an ETF they hold. This gives them the opportunity to unload the ETF if it drops below the strike price in time. Bought alone, the put is speculative because there is a chance that it will expire worthless, and sold alone exposes the investor to unlimited loss. Bought as an extension to an existing position in an ETF, the put's role changes to one of insurance.

The following table shows outcomes for a typical protective put bought for $10 for a strike price of $90 a year away:

ETF at Expiration Profit/Loss calculation Difference from no action
$100 no ETF loss - $10 option cost= -$10 -$10, cost of protective put
$90 $10 ETF loss -$10 option cost= -$20 -$10 since ETF alone would have lost $10
$80 $10 ETF loss (ETF put at $90) - $10 = -$20 None, since ETF alone would have lost $20
$70 $10 ETF loss (ETF put at $90) - $10 = -$20 +$10, since ETF alone would have lost $30

 

Puts make sense if the ETF owner is concerned about serious loss for a short period of time. As with many investments, the price of an option is critical. They are often too expensive to be considered for repeated use. If an investor is truly bearish for the long-term, investors should consider selling out completely. Puts are best used opportunistically.

Transaction fees should be factored in, but in context they can be justified when the alternative of selling out an entire underlying position also generates fees. Tax considerations are also mixed. While income derived from them generally does not enjoy low long-term tax gain treatment, they can help investors avoid incurring capital gains from selling the underlying position.

Options will remain, however, another benefit of ETF ownership and an important, if occasional, tool when used in proper context.

 


Share/Save/Bookmark

Related Articles

Monday, January 23, 2012

401(k)orner - What is a Good Retirement Plan?

Monday, September 13, 2010

Option Theory Does Not Refute Time Diversification

Sunday, January 24, 2010

In Focus - Step 4: Market Timing With ETFs

Tuesday, July 29, 2003

Do Internet ETFs justify their recent run-up?

Tuesday, July 15, 2003

Reversal of the Mean: dogs become stars overnight

Login