In The Money Or Out Of The Money?

Posted by Pete Stolcers on May 12

Option Trading Question

Susan R. asks, “I struggle with which option to buy once I find a trade. The In The Money (ITM) options are expensive but they move well. They are risky because they have so much premium. The Out Of The Money (OTM) options don’t cost much but it takes forever to see them go up. How should I decide which ones to buy?”

Option Trading Answer

Susan addresses a daily dilemma faced by option traders. This is a tough question to answer in one article - but I’ll try. First I need to set the table. 

Every option I trade is determined by my opinion of the stock and my level of confidence in the trade. My opinion of the stock will result from technical analysis. I look at how the stock has traded recently. If it has a history of nice grinding moves, I will approach it differently than if it is volatile. If it is approaching a breakout on heavy volume, I will treat it differently than if it has been marching higher in small increments for months. My confidence is a function of how well I have traded recently, my ability to get a good “read” on the market and how good I feel about this piece of research.

I dissect my opinion into statements about direction, magnitude and duration. If I feel the stock will breakout and move 6 points higher in 6 weeks with a high degree of confidence, I may opt to buy out of the money calls with two months of “life”. This is my selection because these calls will provide the most leverage and the highest percentage rate of return. They also have the chance of going ITM. In that case, I will have a fairly large leveraged stock position to trade out of. My confidence has to be high and I can’t miss on any element or the trade will fail. These trades tend to have a higher failure rate but they produce incredible returns when they “hit”.

Let’s use another example where the stock has been in a strong sector and it is leading the market higher in a nice orderly fashion. It has moved sideways and rested for a week and now it looks ready to grind higher. Let’s say the market is shaky and this stock tends to drift lower in a weak market and lead any rally. Let’s also assume that I feel in a flat market the stock will grind 3 points higher over the course of 2 weeks. In this situation, I like the stock but my confidence is not very strong. I will trade fewer contracts and select an in the money front month option as long as it has 2 weeks of “life”. It must have a delta of .9 (or higher) and not carry more than a $.50 premium over parity. If I can buy the next month’s options for an extra $.30 I will probably make that choice. This selection allows me to participate in a move in the stock and I can take profits along the way. An out of the money option will not move enough for me to do so. Since the stock holds up relatively well in a weak market, I will probably have time to get out of the position without losing much if the market turns sour. In this situation I have more room to be “off” than I did in the OTM example. If the stock stays flat, I can scratch the trade and not lose any premium decay. If the stock only goes up $1 instead of three, I can still make money.

In this example I have assumed that the options are moderately priced. If the implied volatility is high, selling strategies would probably be more effective.

The take away is this, my opinion and confidence determine the selection. The more explosive the move and the higher my confidence, the more I lean towards out of the money options. The more grinding the move and the lower the level of confidence, the more inclined I am to trade In the Money options.

If you have a specific trade you want me to look at - comment! Please include the direction, magnitude, duration and your confidence and I will try to respond.

Option Trading Comments

  • On 04/05, Arkadiy said:

    I think I agree with the autor, it doesn’t really deliver on its promises

  • On 04/05, Arkadiy said:

    Great post. Thanks for all the practical insight for a “young” writer.

  • On 04/14, John H said:

    Money management with low balances.  I read a lot about managing accounts by limiting the percentage of your balance you risk on any individual trade.  However, if a person wants to get into trading, but has a limited amount of capital they are willing to risk, say $2000 - $4000, it seems that one has to risk a substantial percentage to make any gains when all the fees are added in.  If you were to only risk 20% or less on any one trade, you would have to almost double your money a large percentage of your trades and trade short term OTM options.  It seems that risking a larger percentage on a longer term deep ITM trades on quality companies would be safer.  How would you approach trading if your account balance was less that $5000?

  • On 05/12, Online Options Trading said:

    For biotech stocks, which one is better ITM or OTM ?

  • On 05/12, Pete Stolcers said:

    It is impossible to generalize with options. Each stock and market condition is different.

    If the market, the biotech sector and the stock were all in an up trend, an OTM call would be the way to go. If the market is choppy and the stock is grinding higher, selling an OTM put spread might be the way to go, that way you are giving yourself breathing room if the market breaks down.

    Your opinion of the market and the stock determine the right strategy. You must quantify the magnitude and duration of the expected move.

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