Jump to content

Welcome to the new Traders Laboratory! Please bear with us as we finish the migration over the next few days. If you find any issues, want to leave feedback, get in touch with us, or offer suggestions please post to the Support forum here.

  • Welcome Guests

    Welcome. You are currently viewing the forum as a guest which does not give you access to all the great features at Traders Laboratory such as interacting with members, access to all forums, downloading attachments, and eligibility to win free giveaways. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free. Create a FREE Traders Laboratory account here.

Recommended Posts

Traders who use a call backspread are betting that the market price of the underlying asset will go up substantially. The strategy involves buying two or more call options, and selling another, using the same underlying asset. Traders can decide which ratio works best for them, although the normal buy/sell ratio for this type of strategy is 2:1. Investors use a call backspread strategy to enter the market at low to no cost. Sometimes they even gain a credit, which they can use to offset any potential losses. At the same time, their returns are limitless, since the buy orders will always outweigh the sell orders. Thus, the maximum profit an investor can gain is infinite.

 

How to Enter a Call Backspread

A trader must perform two operations at the same time to enter a call backspread.

Example: XYZ is trading at $43 (market price)

 

attachment.php?attachmentid=27562&stc=1&d=1330053557

 

Buying Two Calls

First, a trader will need to buy two calls that are Out-Of-The-Money (OTM).

1) Call Option Available: XYZJan45 ($2)

- One Option = 100 shares of XYZ stock

- Strike Price $45/per share, expiring on 1/15

- Premium Cost of $2.

2) Trader buys two call options and pays $400 (200 x $2 (premium cost)).

 

Selling a Call

Next, the trader will sell a call that's In-The-Money (ITM).

1) Trader writes (sells) call option: XYZJan40 ($4)

- One Option = 100 shares of XYZ stock

- Strike Price $40/per share, expiring on 1/15

- Premium Cost of $4.

2) Trader sells one call option and receives $400 from the buyer.

 

Result: The trader is in the options market, paying nothing to get in (Amount paid $400-$400 Amount Received).

 

Advantage and Disadvantage of Call Backspread

 

Pluses: The upside to this type of strategy is that there are no limits on the profit the investor can receive. If the market price of the underlying asset takes off, the investment will grow at the ratio implemented when entering the strategy, normally 2:1. Another advantage is that the cost of entering the market is either low to none, which depends on the difference between the two strike prices that the trader chooses when implementing the strategy. As a result, risk is limited.

 

Minuses: The downside in using a call backspread is losing money when the price of the underlying asset falls. Losses start when the market price of the underlining asset is between the strike price of the sale order and the strike price of the buy order, plus the points necessary to cover the short.

 

Examples Using the Buy and Sell Orders Above:

 

XYZ Market price declines to $39. (OTM)

Sell Order Result: The option expires OTM and worthless.

Buy Order Result: The option expires OTM and worthless.

Total result: The trader has no loss because he or she paid nothing to enter the market. If there was a credit in the account, the trader would keep it. If the trader paid more than he or she received to enter the strategy, the trader would lose that amount.

 

XYZ Market price increases to $50. (ATM)

Buy Order Result 1: The option expires ITM. The trader exercises his or her right to buy 200 shares at $45, and pays $9000 to whoever wrote the option.

Sell Order Result: The option expires ITM. The trader uses 100 shares from the buy order to cover the call, and receives $4000 from whoever bought the option.

Buy Order Result 2: The trader sells the remaining 100 shares at $50, market value and receives $5000.

Total result: Trader receives $4000(from sale) - pays $9000 (from buy 1) + receives $5,000 (from buy 2) = $0 gain. Thus, the investment broke even when XYZ hit $50.

 

XYZ Market price increases to $60. (ITM)

Buy Order Result 1: The option expires ITM. The trader exercises his or her right to buy 200 shares at $45, and pays $9000 to whoever wrote the option.

Sell Order Result: The option expires ITM. The trader uses 100 shares from the buy order to cover the call, and receives $4000 from whoever bought the option.

Buy Order Result 2: The trader sells the remaining 100 shares at $60, market value and receives $6000.

Total result: Trader receives $4000(from sale) - pays $9000 (from buy 1) + receives $6,000 (from buy 2) = $1000 gain.

 

Choosing the Correct Strike Price

In looking at the example above, one can see that the strike price plays a significant role in a call backspread strategy. If the trader had paid to enter the market, losses would occur when the market price of the underlying asset expires ITM for the sale order or below ATM for the buy order ($40-$50 respectively). Traders should choose strike prices that either gives him or her a credit or costs nothing when entering the market. Doing this will lower any potential loss if things go bad.

call-backspread.gif.aa7451c55a029dbf20f02da5f678af6f.gif

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • Similar Content

    • By Lwayne11
      I had a bad experience in trading. I did lost $17,350 in total and i when i try to cash out one story or the other keep coming up to me at every giving point of time so i give up on them.after several weeks i came across this agency,expert recovery that help me get back about 75 percent of my lost funds. I learnt thee is a class action court proceeding to sue scam binary companies but I believe that takes more time and money paid to lawyers is way expensive. You can talk to a recovery expert.
      Reach Asherellazar at protonmail dot com
    • By DHARMIL
      SELL BANKNIFTY F&O - ₹2300
      SELL NIFTY F&O - ₹2700
      SELL STOCKS F&O - ₹5000
      Contact : 9173302081
    • By Ninjatrader_Staff
      Here is a quick educational video we created on Options on Futures.
       
    • By Ninjatrader_Staff
      Options on futures are now available to trade through NinjaTrader Brokerage! This expansion allows options traders to save on their trades with NinjaTrader’s deep discount commissions and benefit from industry-leading support.
      Why Trade Options on Futures with NinjaTrader Brokerage?
      ·  Discount Pricing: Save on trades with simple low rates
      ·  Span Margins: Real-time portfolio margining
      ·  Low Minimum: Open your account with only $1000
      In addition to the FREE NinjaTrader platform included with all brokerage accounts, traders will also have access to the CQG Desktop web-based platform to trade options on futures.
      ·  Current Clients: Contact Brokerage Support to start trading options on futures
      ·  New Clients: Open Your Brokerage Account
      Let Us Know How We Can Help
      Contact our brokerage team at 312.262.1289 to discuss how NinjaTrader’s solutions can be customized for both new & experienced traders.

      Futures, foreign currency and options trading contains substantial risk and is not for every investor. An investor could potentially lose all or more than the initial investment. Risk capital is money that can be lost without jeopardizing ones financial security or lifestyle. Only risk capital should be used for trading and only those with sufficient risk capital should consider trading. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. View Full Risk Disclosure.
    • By fuqs
      Let's assume I was able to imply dividends from liquid options for the next 3 years, but I want to price an option expiring in the 4rd year from now. How would practitioners normally extrapolate implied dividends? From what i've observed there is a significant risk premium in implied dividends far out (implied divs are sold at discount). Actually the dividend term structure is declining. Therefore probably it makes more sense to extrapolate implied dividend rather than historical growth
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • SEPN Septerna stock watch for a bottom breakout, good upside price gap
    • SEPN Septerna stock watch for a bottom breakout, good upside price gap
    • SEPN Septerna stock watch for a bottom breakout, good upside price gap
    • USAID (the U.S. Agency for International Development) doles out billions in foreign aid every year. On the surface, this sounds noble—"spreading democracy," "fighting poverty," etc.   But zoom in and you’ll find something weird: why is Land O’Lakes, a butter company, getting $100 million in foreign aid?   It gets weirder.   Yale got money to set up police departments in Mexico. Disney was paid to distribute films to the military. Walmart received foreign aid dollars. And nobody really knows why.   This isn’t an accident. It’s architecture.   At the center of it all is a group I’d never heard of before this podcast: USGLC, the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition.   Sounds boring. Bureaucratic.   But USGLC is a private lobbying group loaded with ex-congresspeople, executives from companies like Pepsi, Walmart, and Pfizer. Here's the magic trick:   They lobby Congress for more foreign aid. Their members sit on the advisory boards of USAID. Then, they “advise” where the money goes. The money ends up going… back to them. They write the laws, steer the cash, and collect the checks.   It's like a Monopoly game where the same five players keep passing Go and collecting $200 while the rest of us are stuck in jail.   DR calls it the “infinite money hack.”   It’s the reason, she says, Congress refuses to stop any of this spending.   But here’s maybe the scariest part:   This isn’t corruption in the Hollywood sense. There’s no smoking gun or sinister villain stroking a cat. It’s not Lex Luthor.   It’s worse. It’s normal. The people involved? They generally don’t think they’re doing anything wrong. They believe they’re saving democracy from collapse. That if we don’t export “influence,” China wins. That butter in Botswana somehow keeps Beijing at bay.   But there are no brakes. No accountability. Just mission creep and endless spending in the name of virtue and security.   And when you follow the money, it doesn’t lead to starving children being fed. It leads to nonprofits growing rich off government grants, lobbying for more grants, and giving themselves raises. Author: James Altucher (AltucherConfidential) Profits from free accurate cryptos signals: https://www.predictmag.com/   
    • The part most don’t know: Trump is deadly serious about China and fentanyl.   “In Beijing, if you sell fentanyl on the streets, they’ll execute you,” Ross told me. “But they’ve been subsidizing exports of the stuff that’s killing Americans.”   China executes domestic dealers but allows exports of precursor chemicals to Mexico. Most of it ends up in the US.China knows how dangerous they are but turns a blind eye because it’s not their citizens dying.   Ross says this is personal for Trump. He wants it stopped. And he’s tying it into trade negotiations.   Not with threats.   With leverage.   Rare Earths, Pharma, and the Apple Problem Problem is, we’re addicted to Chinese supply chains. iPhones. Generic drugs. Semiconductors. Vitamins. Ross didn’t deny it. But he says reshoring is starting—and Trump’s policies are finally giving it teeth.   The rare earth thing? A mess. We have the resources. We just don’t process them because it’s dirty, and nobody wants a refinery in their backyard. So we ship it all to China, let them pollute, and then buy it back.   Ross: “It doesn’t make the planet better off to have it processed in China instead of here.”   Makes sense. But the EPA probably won’t love that logic.   Inflation? Recession? Or... Neither? Do tariffs cause inflation? No.   Tariffs did not cause inflation in 2018–2020, despite media panic. Ross argues current inflation claims are more political than economic.   I mentioned Powell saying tariffs will spark inflation again. Ross smiled and said: “I think he's hiding behind that as an excuse not to cut rates.”   Meanwhile, Trump wants to cut energy costs, healthcare costs, and grow the “External Revenue Service.” The goal? Shift from taxing your income to taxing imports.   Ross confirmed a few sleeper details about the tax plan:   Makes Trump’s 2017 cuts permanent Tax-free tips and overtime Incentives for manufacturing here Incentives for foreign investment here And yeah—he also said the reason Trump wanted Greenland? Rare earths.   The Mind Behind the Moves That was just a small part of our conversation.   Whether you love Trump or loathe him, you should understand the game he’s playing. Ross just gave us the playbook.   And if even half of what he said is accurate, we’re entering a new kind of economy. One where tariffs are not just a trade tool—but a tax system. A foreign policy lever. A domestic stimulus.   A weaponized spreadsheet.   You don’t have to agree with it. But you do have to know what’s coming. Author: James Altucher Profits from free accurate cryptos signals: https://www.predictmag.com/   
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.