Option Trading Concepts to Help You Build a Solid Foundation

10. Equivalent Positions

A "covered write" is a position consisting of an asset and a short call on that asset. Stock market investors often use "covered writes" to generate additional income on their long stock portfolio and to provide a partial hedge against a decline in their stock. Can traders of commodities and futures also use "covered writes?"

Certainly they can, however, traders of futures don't usually intend on holding a portfolio of long contracts. They're speculating on short term market movement and they get in and out of positions more frequently than stock market investors. So selling a call against a long futures contract isn't really done to generate income; it's done to reduce downside exposure.

As a strategy that stands on it's own merits (that is, buying a futures and selling a call), it makes little sense for futures traders. Why? Because it's simpler and more cost effective to merely sell a put. The purchase of a futures contract and the sale of a call, for example, is equivalent to the sale of a put having the same strike price as the call. So a trader can save a commission and deal with slippage on only a put rather than on a call and on the futures.

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All information in this site is subject to the terms of this disclaimer.
 TRADING IN FUTURES OR OPTIONS INVOLVES RISK OF LOSS.
 PAST RESULTS ARE NOT NECESSARILY INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS.
Copyright © 2002 Paul Forchione