Is anyone here knowledgable about options trading? I understand most of the concepts of options trading but when it comes to the practical of how to trade options I'm pretty confused.
Say I buy a put at $110 for $6.30. Then the put goes up to $7.95. Now I understand I made a $1.65= 7.95-6.30(not totally sure how this increase in price was calculated and I'll get to that later). But the underlying security is now at $103.20, and if I excersize the put 110-103.20=$6.80 with a $.50 increase (6.80-6.30) not $7.95 with a $1.65 increase (7.95-6.30). Apparently if the intrinsic value only increased by .50 to 6.80 then the time value most have increased by a much larger $1.15 despite the put aging a day. I didn't realize the time value would go up on a put if the security drops in price, I thought just the intrinsic value would. I have no idea how to figure what the time value would change to as the underlying security's price changes. Also it appears it would be much more profitable to offset the put than it would be to excercise it because I gain 1.15 of time value extra buy offsetting that I wouldn't get by exercising the put, right?
I have more questions about options but I'll leave it at this for now. Basically I can't make any sense of the numbers on the option train or how a change in the underlying security price will affect the option's value.
Say I buy a put at $110 for $6.30. Then the put goes up to $7.95. Now I understand I made a $1.65= 7.95-6.30(not totally sure how this increase in price was calculated and I'll get to that later). But the underlying security is now at $103.20, and if I excersize the put 110-103.20=$6.80 with a $.50 increase (6.80-6.30) not $7.95 with a $1.65 increase (7.95-6.30). Apparently if the intrinsic value only increased by .50 to 6.80 then the time value most have increased by a much larger $1.15 despite the put aging a day. I didn't realize the time value would go up on a put if the security drops in price, I thought just the intrinsic value would. I have no idea how to figure what the time value would change to as the underlying security's price changes. Also it appears it would be much more profitable to offset the put than it would be to excercise it because I gain 1.15 of time value extra buy offsetting that I wouldn't get by exercising the put, right?
I have more questions about options but I'll leave it at this for now. Basically I can't make any sense of the numbers on the option train or how a change in the underlying security price will affect the option's value.
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