Equity Options Flashcards

1
Q

When referring to call options, the term “outstanding long position” means:

[A] the total number of option contracts that may be purchased or sold on any one day.
[B] an option contract that has not yet either expired or been closed out through exercise or a liquidation sale.
[C] the investor’s net position of sales over purchases.
[D] the total number of option contracts compared to the number of common shares available on the market.

A

[B] an option contract that has not yet either expired or been closed out through exercise or a liquidation sale.

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2
Q

An investor is considered “covered” in which of the following scenarios involving option contracts? The investor:

[A] sells 1 ABC Call on common stock and owns 100 shares of ABC non-convertible preferred stock.
[B] buys 100 shares of ABC common stock and buys 1 ABC Put.
[C] buys 100 shares of ABC common stock and sells 1 ABC Call.
[D] sells 1 ABC Put and buys 100 shares of ABC common stock.

A

[C] buys 100 shares of ABC common stock and sells 1 ABC Call.

The primary way that the seller of a call option is covered is by having 100 shares of the underlying stock on hand in their portfolio to deliver against an exercise notice if an exercise takes place. The primary way that the seller of a put option is covered is by having cash on hand that is equivalent to the amount needed to buy the stock in the event that an exercise of the put takes place. In this question, when the investor buys 100 shares of ABC and sells 1 ABC Call, the call contract would be considered covered. Options are typically tied to common stock, so a preferred stock position generally would not cover a short call. Buyers of option contracts do not need to be “covered”, because the buyers of options are in control of whether or not an exercise takes place. Long stock will not cover a short put option.

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3
Q

Which of the following are true of the buyer of a call option?

I. The profit potential is unlimited.
II. The maximum loss is limited.
III. The profit potential is limited.
IV. The maximum loss is unlimited.

[A] I and II
[B] I and IV
[C] II and III
[D] III and IV

A

[A] I and II

I is correct because your profit potential is unlimited when you buy a call since you want the market price of the stock to go up. II is correct because when you buy a call the most you can lose is the premium paid for the option.

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4
Q

An investor sells short 100 shares of ABC at $25 per share and simultaneously writes one ABC June 20 put at one. To break even on this position, at what price must ABC stock close on the day prior to expiration of the put.

[A] $24
[B] $25
[C] $26
[D] $27

A

[C] $26

S + 2500
S + 600
=2600 / 100
=26

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5
Q

If a put option is assigned to a writer, the premium received by the writer under Federal Income Tax purposes is

[A] considered ordinary income at the time the premium is received.
[B] considered ordinary income when the put is exercised.
[C] used to increase the tax cost of the stock purchased as a result of the exercise.
[D] used to reduce the tax cost of the stock purchased as a result of the exercise.

A

[D] used to reduce the tax cost of the stock purchased as a result of the exercise.

When an investor writes a put they receive a premium and they are obligated to buy the stock if the option is exercised. If the option is exercised and the customer purchases the stock, the premium received would be used to reduce the cost basis of the stock purchased.

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6
Q

Which of the following does NOT need to be included in a customer confirmation under option exchange rules?

[A] The contra broker and executing agent
[B] The type of option (call or put) and the underlying security
[C] The number of contracts and the premium paid
[D] The exercise price and expiration month

A

[A] The contra broker and executing agent

Confirmations do not need to show the contra broker or the name of the agent executing the trade.

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7
Q

Under the OCC’s option position limit rules, which of the following positions would be combined in order to determine if a customer’s option position is within the specified limits?

[A] Short puts and long calls
[B] Long puts and long calls
[C] Short puts and short calls
[D] Long puts and short puts

A

[A] Short puts and long calls

Position limit rules regulate option positions on the same side of the market. Short puts and long calls are both bullish positions. On the bearish side, long puts and short calls are on the same side of the market.

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8
Q

Mr. Smith purchased 1 CCD July 75 Call @ 4. The Canadian Dollar is trading at $0.74. Mr. Smith’s total premium to purchase the call, assuming a CCD contract is 10,000 units would be:

[A] $40
[B] $400
[C] $750
[D] $300

A

[B] $400

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9
Q

Which two of the following are true of Interest Rate or Yield Based options with U.S. Treasury bonds as the underlying security?

Writers of calls expect interest rates to decline.
Writers of puts expect interest rates to increase.
Writers of calls expect interest rates to increase.
Writers of puts expect interest rates to decline.
[A] I and II
[B] III and IV
[C] I and IV
[D] II and III

A

[A] I and II

With interest rate or yield based options even though U.S. Treasury securities are the underlying securities, the option is traded based on the direction we expect Interest Rates and Yields to move (not prices). Call writers expect interest rates to decline and Put writers expect interest rates to rise.

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10
Q

Yield-based or Interest Rate options are traded based on the value of which of the following underlying securities?

I. Treasury bills with 13 week maturities based on the annualized discount rate of the most recently issued 13 week T-Bills.
II. Treasury Bonds with 30 year maturities based on the yield to maturity of the most recently issued 30 year Treasury Bonds.
III. Treasury Notes with 10 year maturities based on the yield to maturity of the most recently issued 10 year Treasury Notes.
IV. Treasury Notes with 5 year maturities based on the yield to maturity of the most recently issued 5 year Treasury Notes.

[A] I and II
[B] II and III
[C] I, II, and IV
[D] All of the above

A

[D] All of the above

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11
Q

An investor who is short a call option on ABC and wants to offset the position would enter:

[A] an opening sale
[B] a closing purchase
[C] a closing sale
[D] an opening purchase

A

[B] a closing purchase

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12
Q

With regard to Stock Index Options, which two of the following are true of the seller of a call option?

I. The maximum gain is limited to the premium.
II. The maximum gain is unlimited.
III. The maximum loss is unlimited.
IV. The maximum loss is limited to the premium.

[A] I and III
[B] II and IV
[C] II and III
[D] I and IV

A

[A] I and III

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13
Q

A customer buys 100 shares of XYZ at 47 in a cash account and writes 1 XYZ July 40 call at 9. How much must be deposited by the customer into the account?

[A] $1,450
[B] $2,350
[C] $3,800
[D] $4,700

A

[C] $3,800

B - 4700
S+ 900
=3800

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14
Q

A customer buys 200 shares of XYZ at $35 per share and buys 2 XYZ July 35 puts for 3 each. The customer will have a pre-tax profit at what market price for the stock?

[A] $31
[B] $35
[C] $36
[D] $39

A

[D] $39

B - 7000
B - 600
=7600 / 2
=3800 (Breakeven)
39/share is profit
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15
Q

A customer buys 1 ABC July 60 put @ 7 and sells 1 ABC July 50 put @ 2. What is the customer’s maximum loss potential?

[A] $500
[B] $5,500
[C] $6,000
[D] Unlimited

A

[A] $500

B - 700
S + 200
=500

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16
Q

Those of the following which apply to a discretionary options accounts are:

I. There must be frequent supervisory review of the account.
II. Prior written authorization must be obtained from the client.
III. Order tickets must be identified as discretionary when they are entered.
IV. Renewal in writing must be obtained from the client.
[A] I and II
[B] I, II, and III
[C] I, II, and IV
[D] I, II, III, and IV

A

[B] I, II, and III

Discretionary accounts require prior written authorization from the customer before discretionary trades can be made. There must be more frequent review than regular accounts, and all discretionary trades must be designated as such on the order ticket.

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17
Q

Option writers usually sell puts because they

[A] own that particular stock.
[B] hope to obtain a long-term gain.
[C] have a bullish outlook for the stock.
[D] have a bearish outlook for the stock.

A

[C] have a bullish outlook for the stock.

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18
Q

A customer purchases one ABC June 60 put @ 6 and sells one ABC June 50 put at 1. What is the maximum loss on the spread?

[A] $300
[B] $500
[C] $600
[D] $700

A

[B] $500

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19
Q

In which of the following cases is an RR prohibited from selling a call option?

[A] The RR has trading authority in a client’s account.
[B] The client owns 5% of the stock of the underlying company.
[C] The RR receives the order from a corporate client who issued the underlying stock.
[D] An investment adviser for the client, who has third party trading authority, enters the order.

A

[C] The RR receives the order from a corporate client who issued the underlying stock.

Call options may not be sold by the corporation that issued the underlying stock. Selling call options implies the belief that the security will not increase in market value and the issuing corporation has insider knowledge related to the financial condition of the entity. In each of the other scenarios, the RR is permitted to sell the call option.

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20
Q

Of the options transactions listed below, which one is required to indicate whether the position is “covered” or “uncovered?”

[A] Opening Purchase
[B] Closing Sale
[C] Opening Sale
[D] Closing Purchase

A

[C] Opening Sale

When an investor becomes the writer of an option (“Opening Sale”), they must indicate on the sell ticket whether they are covered or uncovered.

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21
Q

A registered representative (RR) could sell uncovered call options in all of the following cases, EXCEPT:

[A] To an account that has been established for a small child’s college education
[B] To a margin account where the account is “restricted”
[C] To a corporate account when the call options are for a separate company
[D] To a joint account involving two people, one of whom is not well-versed in options trading

A

[A] To an account that has been established for a small child’s college education

Uncovered call options may not be sold to custodial accounts, such as those set up for a small child’s college education. Calls are not permitted to be sold to a corporate account when the calls are those tied to the company’s securities, but an RR can sell calls on the stocks of separate companies. Restricted margin accounts can participate in uncovered call writing, and if the joint account is approved for uncovered options trading, the fact that one party may not be well-versed in options trading is not a disqualifying factor.

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22
Q

Mr. Smith decides to establish the following option postions

Long 1 ABC Jun 100 Put @ 7
Short 1 ABC June 90 Put @3

This position would be BEST described as which two of the following?

I. Credit Spread
II. Debit Spread
III. Bullish
IV. Bearish

[A] I & III
[B] I & IV
[C] II & III
[D] II & IV

A

[D] II & IV

Since the difference between the premiums results in a net minus it would be a debit and since we have a buy and a sell on the same type of option on the same stock it is a spread. It would be a bearish spread because the option that he bought has a higher strike price than the one he sold (Bear - buy high) .

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23
Q

An investor buys 100 shares of ABC common stock at 25. If the investor later buys a put on ABC, he/she has:

[A] Created a ratio position
[B] Limited his/her future gain on ABC
[C] Hedged against a price decline
[D] Established a covered put position

A

[C] Hedged against a price decline

A hedge is a security transaction that reduces the risk on an already existing investment position. Buying a put offsets the potential losses from a long stock position.

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24
Q

Assume a client tenders an exercise notice for a call to the OCC on Monday, June 3rd. The OCC assigns the notice to a firm on June 5th. The settlement date for the called stock is?

[A] Tuesday, June 4th
[B] Wednesday, June 5th
[C] Thursday, June 6th
[D] Monday, June 10th

A

[B] Wednesday, June 5th

When a call option is exercised, settlement of the stock is 2 business days from the time OCC receives the exercise notice. If the OCC receives notice on Monday, June 3rd, then 2 business days from this would be Wednesday, June 5th.

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25
Q

Stock Index options normally expire

[A] Weekly
[B] Monthly
[C] Quarterly
[D] Annually

A

[B] Monthly

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26
Q

Which of the following securities transactions would NOT be permitted in a customer’s cash account?

[A] A customer enters an order to sell a block of preferred stock that the customer currently holds long in the account.
[B] A customer enters an order to sell short a block of common stock that the customer currently does not hold long in the account.
[C] A customer enters an order to sell a covered put option in the account.
[D] A customer enters an order to sell a block of municipal bonds that the customer currently holds long in the account.

A

[B] A customer enters an order to sell short a block of common stock that the customer currently does not hold long in the account.

Short sales are NOT permitted in cash accounts. The customer would need a margin account in order to sell stock short. Though options trading is often limited in cash accounts, covered transactions are normally permitted. Selling securities that are currently held long in the cash account would be permitted.

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27
Q

An investor who buys a call:

[A] has the right to sell 100 shares of the underlying stock.
[B] has the right to buy 100 shares of the underlying stock.
[C] has the obligation to sell 100 shares of the underlying stock.
[D] has the obligation to buy 100 shares of the underlying stock.

A

[B] has the right to buy 100 shares of the underlying stock.

Investors who buy calls have the right to buy (call away) 100 shares of the underlying stock. Sellers of options are obligated to perform in the event that the buyer of the option decides to exercise. The right to sell 100 shares of the underlying stock is given by purchasing a put option.

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28
Q

A customer buys 100 shares of XYZ stock for $30 a share, and sells 1 XYZ March 35 call @ 2. What is the maximum loss the customer could sustain?

[A] $2,800
[B] $3,000
[C] $3,200
[D] $3,500

A

[A] $2,800

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29
Q

A customer purchases 1 ABC April 60 put for 8 and sells 1 ABC April 50 put for 1, when ABC stock is selling at $55 per share. What is the maximum profit the customer could realize?

[A] $300
[B] $700
[C] $1,000
[D] $1,300

A

[A] $300

On a spread position, the maximum profit potential is the difference between the strike prices minus the net premium paid.

Difference in Strikes (60 - 50 = 10) x Shares Per Contract (100) = $1,000 - Net Premium Paid (700) = $300 Maximum Profit Potential

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30
Q
An investor would have the greatest upside risk potential with which of the following option positions?
[A]	A call spread performed at a credit
[B]	A put spread performed at a debit
[C]	A short straddle
[D]	A long straddle
A

[C] A short straddle

“Upside Risk” means we are at risk to lose money if the market goes up. In a short straddle we always assume that the short call is “uncovered.” An uncovered call has unlimited risk potential. Therefore, if investors have a position of an uncovered short call, they have unlimited upside risk. This is because they do not own the stock that they have obligated themselves to sell, so they would have to go out into the market to buy the stock at its current market price if the option is exercised.

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31
Q

One of your clients that is a frequent options trader buys 100 shares of ABC common stock @ 45 and buys 1 ABC July 50 Put @ 4. Later the client decides to exercise the put and deliver the long stock position against the exercise. Upon completion of these transactions, for federal tax purposes the customer would have a

[A] $100 profit
[B] $100 in losses
[C] $900 profit
[D] $900 in losses

A

[A] $100 profit

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32
Q

A corporation that has agreed to accept payments in Euro Currency would hedge by which of the following option positions?

[A] Buying puts on the American dollar
[B] Buying calls on the American dollar
[C] Buying puts on the Euro Currency
[D] Buying calls on the Euro Currency

A

[C] Buying puts on the Euro Currency

Since the corporation will be paid in Euro Currency they would want to be protected from a decline in the value of the Euro and would therefore either sell calls or buy puts on the Euro.

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33
Q

Which of the following is correct concerning put or call options long in a margin account?

[A] They are computed at current market value only if the underlying security is listed on a stock exchange.
[B] They are valued at 15% of the strike price.
[C] They are valued at 100% of their market value in each instance.
[D] They have no value in computing the margin required.

A

[D] They have no value in computing the margin required.

Options have no loan value, therefore, they will not figure in when computing the margin required.

34
Q

Your client holds 1 listed XYZ August 50 call. A cash dividend of $2.50 per share is declared. On the ex-date, the terms of the call are:

[A] Exercise Price: $47.50, Number of Underlying Shares per Contract of XYZ: 102
[B] Exercise Price:$50.00, Number of Underlying Shares per Contract of XYZ: 100
[C] Exercise Price: $52.50, Number of Underlying Shares per Contract of XYZ: 97
[D] Exercise Price: $52.50, Number of Underlying Shares per Contract of XYZ: 102

A

[B] Exercise Price:$50.00, Number of Underlying Shares per Contract of XYZ: 100

Listed options are not affected by cash dividends on the common stock, thus there would not be any adjustment made to this option.

35
Q

Listed options contracts are standard contracts that are issued by and guaranteed by:

[A] The Options Clearing Corporation
[B] The Federal Reserve Board
[C] The exchange where the option is listed
[D] The writers of the option

A

[A] The Options Clearing Corporation

Listed option contracts are standardized contracts that are issued by and guaranteed by the Options Clearing Corporation (O.C.C.).

36
Q

Which of the following would be the most profitable during a bear market?

[A] long put on a broad based index
[B] writing covered calls
[C] buying calls on a broad based index
[D] bear call spread

A

[A] long put on a broad based index

37
Q

Which of the following options strategies would be best for an investor interested in maintaining his long position in the market while getting maximum downside protection?

[A] selling covered call
[B] selling covered puts
[C] buying calls
[D] buying puts

A

[D] buying puts

Best downside protection with options is buying a put because you are protected down to O.

38
Q

A new customer walks into the branch and wants to open an account where she wishes to trade options. She has investment experience and meets the firm’s qualifications for option trading. The RR opens the account, having her sign some new account and options account documentation. The RR informs her that options-related information and the Options Disclosure Document (ODD) will be mailed to her the following business day. Which of the following is TRUE of this scenario?

[A] A supervisor has up to 15 days following the opening of the account to review the client’s information and finalize approvals on the account related to options.
[B] The RR would be in violation of industry rules on delivering the Options Disclosure Document (ODD), as delivery is required at or prior to the approval of the account.
[C] The RR would be in violation of industry rules on opening an account, as same-day approval is not possible for new accounts or options trading.
[D] As long as options-related information and the ODD are sent prior to the confirmation of the new customer’s first trade, the RR has acted appropriately.

A

[B] The RR would be in violation of industry rules on delivering the Options Disclosure Document (ODD), as delivery is required at or prior to the approval of the account.

Option Disclosure Document (ODD) regulations require the delivery of the ODD at or prior to the time that the customer’s account is approved for options trading. So, with the information provided, the RR would be violating those delivery requirements by opening the account and sending the ODD later. A supervisor would have to approve the account for options trading before options trading can occur and does not have 15 days to finalize approvals. Same-day approval is both possible and common. The ODD delivery is not prior to confirmation of the first options trade in the account.

39
Q

A customer would have an unlimited dollar risk if he was:

[A] Short 1 WL Jan 50 put
[B] Long 1 WL Jan 50 put
[C] Short 1 WL Jan 50 put and short 100 shares of WL stock
[D] Short 1 WL Jan 50 put and long 100 shares of WL stock

A

[C] Short 1 WL Jan 50 put and short 100 shares of WL stock

Short stock positions have unlimited upside risk. Being Short a put only gives the investor limited upside protection.

40
Q

An investor expects the market value of ABC to remain neutral over the next few months. He is long ABC. How could this investor utilize the expectation that ABC will remain neutral?

[A] He could put on a long straddle.
[B] He could sell a call.
[C] He could buy a put.
[D] He could go short against the box.

A

[B] He could sell a call.

Based on the fact that the investor is long the stock and expects the market to remain stable, the investor would increase his rate of return by selling a call option on the underlying security.

41
Q

All of the following pairs of terms are synonymous when used in options trading EXCEPT:

[A] Exercise price, strike price
[B] Writing, short
[C] Intrinsic value, in-the money
[D] Time value, at-the-money

A

[D] Time value, at-the-money

Time value is the premium minus the intrinsic value. An option that is at-the-money has no intrinsic value.

42
Q

If an investor writes a put and the option expires unexercised, the maximum potential gain on this position is:

[A] unlimited
[B] limited to the premium
[C] the difference between the strike price and zero less the premium
[D] the difference between the market value of the security and strike price.

A

[B] limited to the premium

The maximum gain for a put writer is the premium received. The maximum loss is the exercise price minus the premium received. Option writers can’t exercise options or sell them for profit.

43
Q

A trader buys an ABC June 40 call for 3 when ABC stock is trading at 35. If the stock rises to 50 and the trader exercises the call, which of the following is true:

[A] He realizes a reportable gain of $10 per share
[B] He realizes a reportable gain of $7 per share
[C] He owns a stock with a cost basis of $37 per share
[D] He owns a stock with a cost basis of $43 per share

A

[D] He owns a stock with a cost basis of $43 per share

44
Q

With no other positions in her account, a customer buys 100 shares of XYZ at $45 per share and simultaneously buys 1 XYZ Jan 45 put for a premium of 3. What is the customer’s maximum loss potential on the option?

[A] $300
[B] $4,500
[C] $4,800
[D] Unlimited

A

[A] $300

In this case, the only amount that could be lost is the premium paid to purchase the put. If the stock price goes up, the put would expire. If the stock price declines, the put would be exercised, allowing the customer to sell the stock at the same price it was purchased, thus avoiding loss on the stock.

45
Q

An investor who thinks XYZ common stock will have little or no price movement in the near future should do which of the following?

[A] long straddle
[B] long put
[C] short straddle
[D] vertical spread

A

[C] short straddle

A short straddle is a neutral market strategy and would be used by investors that expected little or no movement in the market price of a security.

46
Q

An investor who is “bullish” should invest in all of the following EXCEPT:

[A] buy calls
[B] buy stock
[C] sell naked calls
[D] sell naked puts

A

[C] sell naked calls

A “bullish” investor expects the market to rise. Therefore, the investor should buy stock or buy the call option. The investor could also sell puts because the buyer won’t exercise the option if the price of the underlying stock goes up and the investor can keep a premium. A bullish investor should not sell or write calls because the holder will exercise the option against the investor in an “up” market. The potential risk or reward of naked positions is greater than that of covered positions.

47
Q

An investor expects a rise in the market and buys 1 OEX June 170 Call @ 6 on May 6. By June 5 the S & P Index closes at 187.80, and the investor exercises the option. What is the gross settlement upon exercise?

[A] $1,700
[B] $1,780
[C] $1,878
[D] $2,380

A

[B] $1,780

Gross settlement means that you only consider the “exercise” and not premium. Therefore, the gross settlement is:

17.80 x 100 = $ 1,780

48
Q

All of the following positions have unlimited loss potential EXCEPT:

[A] short straddle
[B] uncovered call
[C] uncovered put
[D] short stock - short put

A

[C] uncovered put

Uncovered short puts have limited loss potential, the exercise price less the premium received.

49
Q

A customer writes 10 ABC May 40 calls @ 4.75 when the market price of ABC is $42 per share. What is the customer’s maximum gain potential?

[A] $4,750
[B] $40,000
[C] $42,000
[D] Unlimited

A

[A] $4,750

50
Q

All of the following positions are “bullish” EXCEPT:

[A] long stock
[B] long call
[C] short put
[D] short straddle

A

[D] short straddle

Writing a put and a call on the same stock with the same expiration date is call a short straddle. A trader writes a straddle when he/she expects the market price of the stock to remain neutral. Long stock, long call and short puts are all “bullish: positions.

51
Q

All of the following cover a call writer EXCEPT

[A] a long position in the underlying security.
[B] the deposit of an escrow receipt for the underlying security.
[C] long a call on the same security with an equal or lower exercise price than the short call.
[D] long a call on the same security with an equal or greater exercise price than the short call.

A

[D] long a call on the same security with an equal or greater exercise price than the short call.

The question is looking for which would not cover a call writer (all of the following except).
What do we need to be covered when we sell a call? Well to cover an exercise on the call we would have to sell stock. Therefore, we would need stock.

According to OCC regulations a short call can only be covered by: 1. being long the stock. 2. getting an escrow or depository receipt from a bank. 3. Being long a call with an equal or lower exercise price.

The coverage from the long call with a lower exercise price comes from the fact that we can buy the stock to deliver on our sold contract with an exercise of our long contract.

52
Q

An investor who buys a call:

[A] has the right to sell 100 shares of the underlying stock.
[B] has the right to buy 100 shares of the underlying stock.
[C] has the obligation to sell 100 shares of the underlying stock.
[D] has the obligation to buy 100 shares of the underlying stock.

A

[B] has the right to buy 100 shares of the underlying stock.

53
Q

Which of the following option positions would represent the most risk to a customer?

[A] Net debit spread
[B] Net credit spread
[C] Long call
[D] Short straddle

A

[D] Short straddle

As we know, a short straddle is a short call combined with a short put on the same underlying security, each having the same strike price and exercise month. Should the market price of the underlying stock increase, the short call can be exercised against you. Since the stock price can increase without limit, the short straddle has unlimited loss potential.

54
Q

A customer buys 1 ABC July 60 put @ 7 and sells 1 ABC July 50 put @ 2. What is the customer’s maximum loss potential?

[A] $500
[B] $5,500
[C] $6,000
[D] Unlimited

A

[A] $500

55
Q

Regular-way settlement for options transactions is

[A] T+1.
[B] T+2.
[C] T+3.
[D] T+4 .

A

[A] T+1.

Regular way settlement for transactions in options is T+1. If the customer does not pay in T+1, Reg T settlement provides the customer with a grace period settlement of T+4.

56
Q

An investor with a large portfolio of equity securities wants to write covered calls against his portfolio. All of the following are true about this type of strategy EXCEPT?
[A] The tax consequences with regards to any premiums received and the cost basis of the stock should be reviewed.
[B] This strategy will work best during a Bullish market
[C] The investor’s profit on the long stock would be limited to the strike price of call options written against the portfolio of stock
[D] This is considered to be a conservative option strategy

A

[B] This strategy will work best during a Bullish market

Covered Call writing is generally used when a neutral or down market is expected. If the investor felt bullish about the market they should not write covered calls because they would then limit their participation in the up move their long stock positions to whatever the strike price is on the calls that they wrote.

57
Q

In order to receive a dividend, the holder of a call option must file an exercise notice with the O.C.C. when?

[A] Just prior to ex-date
[B] On ex-date
[C] Just prior to record date
[D] On the record date

A

[A] Just prior to ex-date

It must be remembered that “EX” means without therefore an investor must own the stock just prior to the ex-date in order to receive the dividend. Exercise date of the option determines ownership of the stock

58
Q

Each of the following are reasons for buying a listed put option on an exchange as opposed to selling short the underlying stock, EXCEPT

[A] buying a put would require a smaller capital commitment than that required for a short sale.
[B] an investor will not be subject to unlimited loss potential when buying a Put.
[C] any time-value in the put gradually dissipates as it approaches expiration.
[D] buying a put has lower dollar loss potential than selling short the stock.

A

[C] any time-value in the put gradually dissipates as it approaches expiration.

Although “C” is a true statement it is not a reason for buying a put rather than selling stock short.

59
Q

Assume a customer buys 1 ABC May 60 call @ 6 and sells 1 ABC May 70 call @ 3 when ABC stock is selling at $63 per share. What is the customer’s breakeven price for the stock?

[A] 57
[B] 60
[C] 63
[D] 73

A

[C] 63

B-600
S+300
= -300
On a spread, the breakeven is always determined from the strike price on the LONG.

Call
\+ plus premium debt or
- minus premium credit	
Put
- minus premium debit or
\+ plus premium credit
60 call
\+3
=63
60
Q

A customer who is short 5 ABC Jun 45 calls and short 5 ABC June 35 puts has put on which of the following types of market strategies?

[A] Bullish
[B] Bearish
[C] Mixed
[D] Neutral

A

[D] Neutral

When an investor is short both ABC calls and puts it is either a short straddle or short combination. Short straddles and short combinations represent “neutral” market strategies.

61
Q

A customer buys 1 Broad Based Index March 70 call at a premium of 5. The Index closes at 78.00 and the option is exercised. Assuming a multiplier of $100, what is the profit or loss to the customer upon exercise?

[A] $300 profit
[B] $500 loss
[C] $800 profit
[D] $1,300 loss

A

[A] $300 profit

62
Q

One of your customers regularly trades in options. The customer puts on a long straddle position on ABC Jan 60 contracts with a premium of 4. The market value of ABC goes to 64 and the customer exercises the call. The customer then sells the shares of ABC at the market price. Assuming that the put expires without being exercised, your customer will realize how much profit or loss?

[A] The customer will not realize a gain or a loss on the positions listed.
[B] The customer will realize a $400 profit on the position.
[C] The customer will realize a $600 loss on the position.
[D] The customer will realize a $600 profit on the position.

A

[A] The customer will not realize a gain or a loss on the positions listed.

The customer puts on the long straddle with a premium of 4. So the customer pays a total of $400 in premiums to put on the long straddle. The straddle refers to both positions. (therefore, you wouldn’t have $400 in premiums for each contract.)
The investor then decides to exercise the long ABC 60 Call when the market price is at 64. This means that the investor buys ABC at $60. The question then mentions that the investor immediately sells the shares at the market price ($64).
So the investor paid $400 (B - 400)
The investor exercises the Call (B - 6000)
The investor Sell the shares in the market (S + 6400)
This results in the customer having no gain or loss on the position.

63
Q

One of your clients is an options trader. In looking over the financials and news for Company X, this client feels that Company X common stock will not fluctuate much in price over the next several months. Which options position listed below will provide the MOST PROFIT for this client with this consideration in mind?

[A] Putting on a bullish call spread
[B] Putting on a short straddle
[C] Buying a put option
[D] Buying a call option

A

[B] Putting on a short straddle

Since the client does not expect any significant move in the stock price, they would sell calls and sell puts, putting on a short straddle. This will be the most profitable of the options positions listed if the market price of Company X remains stable. It will allow the client to receive premiums from the sale of both options.

64
Q

Which of the following orders have priority at the opening of trading on the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE)?

[A] All market orders
[B] Spread orders
[C] Public market orders
[D] Limit orders

A

[C] Public market orders

Market orders from the public would always have priority at the opening of trading.

65
Q

Yield-based or Interest Rate options are traded based on the value of which of the following underlying securities?

I. Treasury bills with 13 week maturities based on the annualized discount rate of the most recently issued 13 week T-Bills.
II. Treasury Bonds with 30 year maturities based on the yield to maturity of the most recently issued 30 year Treasury Bonds.
III. Treasury Notes with 10 year maturities based on the yield to maturity of the most recently issued 10 year Treasury Notes.
IV. Treasury Notes with 5 year maturities based on the yield to maturity of the most recently issued 5 year Treasury Notes.

[A] I and II
[B] II and III
[C] I, II, and IV
[D] All of the above

A

[D] All of the above

66
Q

XYZ is currently trading at $40. An investor who is long 1,000 XYZ shares believes the shares will trade lower within the next six months. Which option strategy best protects the investor’s long position?

[A] Sell 10 XYZ calls
[B] Buy an XYZ put
[C] Sell an XYZ call
[D] Buy 10 XYZ puts

A

[D] Buy 10 XYZ puts

Investors who are long stock would buy puts for downside protection. Buying a put gives the best protection because you are theoretically protected all the way down to a market price of zero.
Selling a call only gives you protection up to the amount of the premium received; therefore, you only have limited protection. Also, with selling a call, you run the risk of having the stock called away from you if the option is exercised.
Also, one option contract equals 100 hundred shares of the underlying stock. This investor has 1,000 shares so 10 option contracts are required to fully protect the long position.

67
Q

An investor expects the general market will have a narrow trading range in the near future. Which of the following option strategies would be most appropriate?

[A] buy index calls
[B] buy puts
[C] sell uncovered calls
[D] sell straddles

A

[D] sell straddles

If the market trades within a narrow range, this would be the best time to use a neutral market strategy with options. Therefore the short (sell) straddle would work the best since investors use short straddles when they expect the market to remain neutral.

68
Q

All of the following cover a call writer EXCEPT

[A] a long position in the underlying security.
[B] the deposit of an escrow receipt for the underlying security.
[C] long a call on the same security with an equal or lower exercise price than the short call.
[D] long a call on the same security with an equal or greater exercise price than the short call.

A

[D] long a call on the same security with an equal or greater exercise price than the short call.

The question is looking for which would not cover a call writer (all of the following except).
What do we need to be covered when we sell a call? Well to cover an exercise on the call we would have to sell stock. Therefore, we would need stock.

According to OCC regulations a short call can only be covered by: 1. being long the stock. 2. getting an escrow or depository receipt from a bank. 3. Being long a call with an equal or lower exercise price.

The coverage from the long call with a lower exercise price comes from the fact that we can buy the stock to deliver on our sold contract with an exercise of our long contract.

69
Q

A current copy of the Options Disclosure Document (ODD) must be delivered to a customer:

[A] At or prior to the time a customer’s first option trade is executed.
[B] At or prior to the time a customer’s confirmation of his first option transaction is mailed.
[C] At the time the registered representative first discussed options with the customer.
[D] At or prior to the time the customer’s option account is approved.

A

[D] At or prior to the time the customer’s option account is approved.

The ODD must be supplied to the customer at or prior to the time his option account is approved.

70
Q

Which of the following would NOT be a benefit of purchasing call options for the stocks of a number of different companies?

[A] If the underlying stocks decline, the investor’s losses would be limited to the amount of the premiums.
[B] By exercising the calls early, the investor could limit the risk in his portfolio.
[C] If the underlying stocks moved upward, the investor could participate in this upward movement.
[D] Added diversification would be provided to the investor only until the calls expire.

A

[B] By exercising the calls early, the investor could limit the risk in his portfolio.

When buying call options, the risk level is limited to the premiums paid for the calls. For this reason, it is incorrect to state that exercising calls early limits risk on the portfolio. Each of the other items is a benefit of buying call options on different stocks.

71
Q

One of your fellow registered representatives wishes to send out an approved worksheet on options. The worksheet must be sent out with, or preceded by, which of the following documents?

[A] Documents including the appropriate disclaimers
[B] Documents related to opening a margin account
[C] Documents related to opening an options account
[D] Documents including the ODD (Options Disclosure Document)

A

[D] Documents including the ODD (Options Disclosure Document)

Any options-related material that is sent out must be preceded or accompanied by the Options Disclosure Document (ODD).

72
Q

All of the following communications that will be sent to prospective clients (who have not received the options disclosure document (ODD)) would require filing with FINRA prior to first use EXCEPT:

[A] advertising
[B] sales literature
[C] independently prepared reprints
[D] correspondence to 20 retail clients

A

[D] correspondence to 20 retail clients

FINRA rules require filing of all but D because the ODD has not been furnished. D is not required to file because it is correspondence, which does not require filing. If the distribution were 25 or more, it would be considered sales literature and then requires filing.

73
Q

Mr. Jones is opening a new options account with your firm. He is sent a copy of his background and financial information which he is asked to verify and, if necessary, correct. Mr. Jones never responds to the request. Under option exchange rules:

[A] the firm must send him a second request within 15 days.
[B] the firm must apply to the OCC to continue to maintain the account.
[C] the firm may consider the information to be verified.
[D] unless Mr. Jones verified the information in writing, no further orders may be accepted.

A

[C] the firm may consider the information to be verified.

Although the “Option Account Agreement” must be returned within 15 days, the “financial and background” information may be considered verified if the customer does not respond to change any information sent for verification.

74
Q

When must the options disclosure document (ODD) be furnished to a customer?

[A] At or prior to the account being approved for options
[B] Prior to the first options transaction
[C] At the time the first confirmation is sent
[D] After the ROP at the member firm’s principal office reviews the new account

A

[A] At or prior to the account being approved for options

The ODD must be delivered at or prior to the account approval. FINRA does allow electronic delivery via a one-click link to the ODD.

75
Q

An investor that thinks the market price of a stock is going to go down and is interested in trading options but wants a position that would limit their loss potential would do which two of the following?

I. Bullish
II. Bearish
III. Spread
IV. Straddle

[A] I & III
[B] I & IV
[C] II & III
[D] II & IV

A

[C] II & III

Since the investor expects the market price of stock to go down they would be bearish and since the investor wants to limit their loss potential they would put a spread because a spread is on both sides of the market at the same time the loss potential is limited.

76
Q

A customer purchased 1 January 220 Standard & Poor’s 100 index call for a premium of 5 when the Standard & Poor’s 100 is trading at 219. The required deposit for this position is:

[A] $250
[B] $500
[C] $1,000
[D] $1,250

A

[B] $500

The premium is the only payment required when you buy an option, therefore this investor would pay $500.

77
Q

If a client of yours places an order to buy 100 shares of BCD at a market price of $41 per share and also places an order to sell 1 BCD June 35 call for 7, at what market price will the customer break even?

[A] The customer will break even at a market price of $48 per share.
[B] The customer will break even at a market price of $42 per share.
[C] The customer will break even at a market price of $34 per share.
[D] The customer will break even at a market price of $28 per share.

A

[C] The customer will break even at a market price of $34 per share.

The customer buys at $41 and sells a call with a premium of 7. B 4,100 - S 700 + Therefore the customer will breakeven at a market price of $34 per share.

78
Q

An investor holding which of the following securities could receive a dividend?

[A] ADR’s
[B] LEAPS
[C] Long Calls
[D] Rights

A

[A] ADR’s

American Depository Receipts are securities which can pay a dividend to investors, whereas all other choices listed do not pay dividends.

79
Q

All of the following are correct concerning customer background and financial information according to option exchange rules, EXCEPT:

[A] Financial information which the customer supplies must be verified by the broker-dealer within 15 days after the account has been approved for options transactions.
[B] If the firm becomes aware of material changes concerning existing customers, a copy of background and financial information on file must be sent to the customer within 15 days after the firm becomes aware of the change.
[C] Customer background and financial information must be sent to the customer by the firm for verification within 15 days after the account is approved for options transactions unless it is contained in the customer’s account agreement.
[D] Customer background and financial information must be returned by the customer to the firm for account purposes within 15 days of being sent and reviewed by the customer.

A

[D] Customer background and financial information must be returned by the customer to the firm for account purposes within 15 days of being sent and reviewed by the customer.

Background and financial information of a customer must be verified within 15 days after the account was approved for options trading. Material changes would require additional verification within 15 days of the change. These conditions must take place unless the background and financial information were included in the customer’s account agreement. The customer does NOT need to return the information within 15 days of it being sent.

80
Q

A customer purchases one ABC June 60 put @ 6 and sells one ABC June 50 put at 1. What is the investor’s breakeven point?

[A] $50
[B] $54
[C] $55
[D] $57

A

[C] $55

Breakeven on a debit spread such as this is determined from the long position.

Put = Long Exercise Price - Net Debit

60 - 5 = 55