🎉 Share Your 2025 Year-End Summary & Win $10,000 Sharing Rewards!
Reflect on your year with Gate and share your report on Square for a chance to win $10,000!
👇 How to Join:
1️⃣ Click to check your Year-End Summary: https://www.gate.com/competition/your-year-in-review-2025
2️⃣ After viewing, share it on social media or Gate Square using the "Share" button
3️⃣ Invite friends to like, comment, and share. More interactions, higher chances of winning!
🎁 Generous Prizes:
1️⃣ Daily Lucky Winner: 1 winner per day gets $30 GT, a branded hoodie, and a Gate × Red Bull tumbler
2️⃣ Lucky Share Draw: 10
Options Playbook: Understand Buying and Selling Strategies to Avoid Infinite Loss Traps
Do you think you can only make money by buying low and selling high? Actually, that’s not the case. Options, this financial derivative instrument, allow you to profit in bear markets, bull markets, and even sideways markets. But the problem is, many people are intimidated by the complexity of options. Today, I’ll quickly guide you to get started.
What exactly are options?
Simply put, options (also called choice rights) are contracts that give you the “right” to buy or sell an asset at a fixed price in the future, not the obligation. You pay a small amount of money to obtain the right to buy or sell an asset at a certain price later on. The asset can be stocks, currencies, indices, commodities, or even futures contracts.
Why use options? Three core advantages:
However, this also means you need broker approval. Before starting options trading, you must fill out an options agreement, allowing the broker to assess your financial strength, trading experience, and options knowledge.
Five essential options terms
6 key points to check in an options contract
When beginners start reading options quotes, don’t be scared. Each contract contains the following basic elements:
The four main options strategies, with vastly different risks and rewards
Options are divided into buying and selling, calls and puts, forming four basic strategies.
1. Buying a call option — Expecting a surge
You buy a call option, which is like getting a “discount coupon.” Suppose you buy a Tesla (TSLA.US) call option when the stock price is $175, with an options price of $6.93, and a strike price of $180. You pay $693 (6.93 × 100) for this coupon.
If the stock price stays below $180, you abandon the coupon, losing only the $693, with no further loss. But if the stock rises to $200, you can buy at $180 and sell at $200, earning the difference. The higher the stock price, the more you earn. That’s the play of buying a call option.
2. Buying a put option — Expecting a decline
This time, you buy the “right to sell cheaply.” The lower the stock price drops, the more you profit. Similarly, if the stock doesn’t fall as you expected, your maximum loss is the premium paid for the option. The risk is capped, which is the advantage of a buying strategy.
3. Selling a call option — Dangerous game
Options are zero-sum games; the buyer wins, the seller loses. If you sell a call option without owning the underlying stock, you are taking on unlimited risk. For example, you collect $100 in premium, but if the stock surges skyrocketing / surge, you must buy high and sell low to the buyer, potentially losing far more than the $100 received. This is a “win some, lose some” scenario.
4. Selling a put option — Collect premium but bear risks
You hope the stock price rises or stays stable, so you keep the premium received from selling the option. But what if the stock crashes? For example, with a put option with a strike of $160 and a premium of $361, if the stock drops to zero, you are forced to buy 100 shares at $160 each, which is worthless, resulting in a loss of up to $15,639 (160 × 100 - 361). The risk of selling options far exceeds buying; don’t forget that.
How to avoid losing everything on options?
Options risk management has four tips:
Avoid net short positions
Don’t sell too many options. Selling options creates short positions with unlimited losses, much riskier than buying options. If you use multiple options strategies, make sure to check whether you are net long (more bought than sold), neutral (equal), or net short (more sold than bought). If you find yourself unintentionally becoming net short, quickly buy some options to balance, so you know your maximum potential loss.
Control position size
Don’t put all your chips into one strategy. If your options strategy requires paying premiums upfront, be prepared that this money could be lost entirely. Options can amplify gains and losses, so don’t decide your trading size based on margin alone; consider the actual total value of the contract.
Diversify investments
Don’t allocate all your funds into options on a single stock, index, or commodity. Build a reasonable portfolio to reduce single-point risk.
Set stop-loss
For strategies involving net short positions, stop-loss is crucial because losses can be unlimited. In contrast, for net long and neutral options strategies, stop-loss requirements are less strict because maximum losses are already known.
Options vs futures vs CFDs, who should you choose?
These three derivatives each have strengths. Options are complex to understand and respond slowly to small changes in the underlying asset. If you want to capture short-term narrow-range opportunities and can tolerate risk, futures or CFDs might be more suitable.
Final words
Options are powerful tools, but they can also hurt you easily. Mastering how to play options is just the first step; the real test is disciplined execution—controlling risks, diversifying investments, and setting proper stop-losses. And don’t forget, even the best tools only make money when your judgment is correct. So, doing thorough research is always the safest investment habit.