Option: Definition, How It Works, and Key Concepts
How Options Work
An option is a derivative — its value comes from an underlying asset, typically a stock. But unlike owning shares, an option gives you the right to act without the obligation to follow through.
Every options contract has four building blocks:
| Component | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Underlying Asset | The stock, index, ETF, or other security the option is based on |
| Strike Price | The price at which the buyer can buy (call) or sell (put) the underlying |
| Expiration Date | The last date the option can be exercised |
| Premium | The price paid by the buyer to the seller for the contract |
One standard equity options contract controls 100 shares of the underlying stock. So if an option is quoted at $3.00, the actual cost is $300 per contract (100 × $3.00).
Calls vs. Puts
There are only two types of options. Everything else in the options world is built from these two pieces.
| Feature | Call Option | Put Option |
|---|---|---|
| Right Granted | Right to buy the underlying | Right to sell the underlying |
| Buyer’s Outlook | Bullish — expects price to rise | Bearish — expects price to fall |
| Buyer’s Max Loss | Premium paid | Premium paid |
| Seller’s Max Loss | Theoretically unlimited | Strike price minus premium (stock goes to $0) |
| Profitable When | Underlying rises above strike + premium | Underlying falls below strike − premium |
Buying vs. Selling Options
This distinction is critical. Buying and selling options create completely different risk profiles.
Buying an Option (Going Long)
You pay the premium upfront. Your maximum loss is limited to that premium — no matter how far the underlying moves against you. You have the right to exercise but can also let the option expire worthless or sell it before expiration.
Selling an Option (Writing)
You collect the premium upfront. In exchange, you take on an obligation. If the buyer exercises, you must deliver. Selling options can generate income, but the risk is asymmetric — your profit is capped at the premium received, while your loss can be substantially larger. Selling a naked call carries theoretically unlimited risk since the underlying price has no ceiling.
Moneyness: ITM, ATM, and OTM
“Moneyness” describes the relationship between the option’s strike price and the current market price of the underlying. It tells you whether the option has intrinsic value right now.
| Status | Call Option | Put Option |
|---|---|---|
| In the Money (ITM) | Stock price > Strike price | Stock price < Strike price |
| At the Money (ATM) | Stock price ≈ Strike price | Stock price ≈ Strike price |
| Out of the Money (OTM) | Stock price < Strike price | Stock price > Strike price |
Only in-the-money options have intrinsic value. All options — ITM, ATM, or OTM — can have time value, which decreases as expiration approaches (a phenomenon measured by the Greek theta).
What Determines an Option’s Price?
An option’s premium is driven by five main factors:
| Factor | Effect on Calls | Effect on Puts |
|---|---|---|
| Underlying price rises | Premium increases | Premium decreases |
| Strike price (higher) | Premium decreases | Premium increases |
| More time to expiration | Premium increases | Premium increases |
| Higher implied volatility | Premium increases | Premium increases |
| Higher interest rates | Premium increases (slightly) | Premium decreases (slightly) |
These sensitivities are quantified by the Options Greeks — delta, gamma, theta, vega, and rho — which measure how much the option price changes for a given change in each factor.
American vs. European Options
These terms have nothing to do with geography. They describe when the option can be exercised.
| Feature | American-Style | European-Style |
|---|---|---|
| Exercise Timing | Any time before or at expiration | Only at expiration |
| Common For | Individual stock options | Index options (e.g., SPX) |
| Premium | Slightly higher (more flexibility) | Slightly lower |
Most equity options in the U.S. are American-style. Most index options are European-style.
Real-World Example
Stock XYZ trades at $100. You believe it will rise over the next two months.
You buy a call option: strike price $105, expiration in 60 days, premium $3.00 per share. Total cost: $300 (one contract = 100 shares).
Scenario A — Stock rises to $115: Your option is in the money by $10. Subtracting the $3 premium, your profit is $7 per share, or $700. That’s a 233% return on your $300 investment. The stock only moved 15%.
Scenario B — Stock stays at $100: Your option expires worthless. You lose the $300 premium. That’s a 100% loss.
Scenario C — Stock drops to $90: Same outcome as B — you lose $300. Your loss is capped at the premium, no matter how far the stock falls.
This asymmetry — limited downside, amplified upside — is why options appeal to traders. But notice how scenario B shows you can lose 100% even when the stock doesn’t move at all. Time decay (theta) works against option buyers constantly.
Common Options Strategies
| Strategy | What It Does | Market Outlook |
|---|---|---|
| Covered Call | Own shares + sell a call — generates income | Neutral to mildly bullish |
| Protective Put | Own shares + buy a put — limits downside | Bullish with insurance |
| Straddle | Buy a call + put at the same strike — profits from big moves | Volatile (direction unknown) |
| Iron Condor | Sell a call spread + put spread — profits from low volatility | Range-bound |
For a full breakdown of options strategies with payoff diagrams, see the Options Strategies Cheat Sheet.
Options vs. Stocks
| Feature | Stocks | Options |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership | Yes — equity in the company | No — contractual right only |
| Expiration | None — hold indefinitely | Yes — finite lifespan |
| Leverage | 1:1 (unless using margin) | Built-in leverage |
| Dividends | Received by shareholders | Not received by option holders |
| Max Loss (buyer) | Full investment | Premium paid |
Key Takeaways
- An option gives you the right, not obligation, to buy (call) or sell (put) an underlying asset at a set price before a set date.
- Buyers pay a premium and have limited risk. Sellers collect the premium but take on potentially large obligations.
- Option prices are driven by the underlying price, strike price, time to expiration, implied volatility, and interest rates.
- Moneyness (ITM, ATM, OTM) describes whether an option currently has intrinsic value.
- Options enable hedging, speculation, and income generation — but time decay constantly erodes their value.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an option in simple terms?
An option is a contract that gives you the right to buy or sell a stock (or other asset) at a specific price before a specific date. You pay a fee called a premium for this right. If the trade doesn’t work out, you can walk away — your maximum loss is the premium you paid.
What is the difference between a call and a put?
A call option gives you the right to buy the underlying asset — you profit when the price goes up. A put option gives you the right to sell — you profit when the price goes down. Both cost a premium and expire on a set date.
Can you lose more than you invest with options?
If you’re buying options, no — your maximum loss is the premium paid. But if you’re selling (writing) options, especially naked calls, your potential loss can be much larger than the premium collected. Naked call sellers face theoretically unlimited losses.
Why do most options expire worthless?
Many options are bought as insurance or speculative bets that don’t pan out. Out-of-the-money options need the stock to move past the strike price by more than the premium paid to be profitable. That doesn’t happen as often as buyers hope, especially for short-dated contracts.
How are options different from futures?
Options give the buyer a right without an obligation — if the trade moves against you, you simply don’t exercise. Futures contracts create an obligation for both parties to transact at the agreed price. This fundamental difference means options buyers have limited risk (the premium), while futures traders face unlimited risk in both directions.
Do I need a lot of money to trade options?
Not necessarily. Buying a single options contract can cost as little as $50–$200 depending on the stock and contract terms. However, some strategies (like selling puts or writing covered calls) require holding shares or significant margin. Most brokers have minimum account requirements and approval levels for options trading.
Related Terms
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Derivative | A contract whose value is derived from an underlying asset |
| Call Option | An option granting the right to buy the underlying at the strike price |
| Put Option | An option granting the right to sell the underlying at the strike price |
| Strike Price | The price at which the option can be exercised |
| Premium | The price paid to buy an options contract |
| Implied Volatility | The market’s expectation of future price swings, embedded in the option premium |
| Delta | Measures how much an option’s price changes per $1 move in the underlying |
Deeper dive: How Options Work · Calls and Puts Explained · The Greeks Explained · Options Strategies Cheat Sheet