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by owenmarshall
996 days ago
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> In the typical case, you can continue to collect those pennies. Top notch comment, considering options trading is often described as "picking up pennies in front of a steamroller." > Loss aversion and all that, but it feels like a reasonable strategy where you still come out ahead in the worst case You don't come out ahead in the worst case – the option you wrote can settle deep ITM and you are compelled to sell a stock at a loss. Worst case you could lose a major chunk of change. |
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On the other hand, if the price shoots up to, say, $85, I'm still obligated to sell them at $50. Since I bought them at $10, I've still made $4001 profit, but I'm still dissatisfied because I would have made $7500 if I hadn't sold the call option.
What you're describing is what happens if I don't already own those shares and the price skyrockets. If the counterparty exercises their $50 option when the current price is $85, then yes, I'm obligated to buy the shares at market price and sell for a total loss of ($STRIKE_PRICE * 100) - $5000 - 1.