High Return Investments
Put option
A put option is a financial contract between two parties, the buyer and the seller of the option, that allows the buyer, then owner, of the option the right but not the obligation to sell a commodity or financial instrument (the underlying) to the seller of the option at a certain time (or times depending on the exact specification of the contract) for a certain price, known as the strike. Note that the seller of the option undertakes to buy the underlying! In exchange for being granted this option, the buyer pays the seller a fee. The most widely-known put option is the option to sell stock in a particular company. This is a stock option. However options are traded on many other quantities both financial, such as interest rates (called an interest rate cap) or foreign exchange rates (see foreign exchange option) and physical such as gold or crude oil. Example of a put option on a stock I might enter a contract to have the option to sell a share in Microsoft Corp. on June 1 2003 for $50. If the share price is actually $40 on that day then I would exercise my option (i.e. sell the share from the counter-party). I could then buy another share in the open market for $40, i.e. the option would be worth $10; my profit would be $10 minus the fee I paid for the option. If however the share price is as much as $60 then I would not exercise the option (if I really wanted to sell such a share, I could do so in the open market for $60). My option would be worthless and I would have lost my whole investment, the fee for the option. Thus in any future state of the world, I am certain not to lose money by owning the option, my loss is limited to the fee I have paid. This implies that the option itself must have some positive value, the fee mentioned above. It varies with the share price. The science of determining this value is the central tenet of financial mathematics. The most common method is to use the Black-Scholes formula. The value of a put option is closely related to that of a call option. See put-call parity. Like in the case of share trading, buyers and sellers of options do not usually interact directly with each other; the options exchange is intermediary. The seller has to supply a guarantee to the options exchange that he can fulfill his obligation if the buyer chooses to execute his option.
Investment FreshNews:
British finance minister paints bleak picture of economy (AFP via Yahoo! News)
Sat, 19 Jul 2008 00:25:20 GMT
Britain's economic downturn is worse than previously thought and there is no extra money available for public spending, finance minister Alistair Darling said in an interview published Saturday.
IAC Raises $2 Billion in Debt to Finance Spinoff Plan (Update2) (Bloomberg.com)
Fri, 18 Jul 2008 21:50:44 GMT
July 18 (Bloomberg) -- IAC/InterActiveCorp , the Internet company controlled by Barry Diller , signed agreements to raise almost $2 billion to finance the spinoffs of three divisions, part of a plan to break up the company.
$2.45b sale to finance major mine expansion (Toowoomba Chronicle)
Fri, 18 Jul 2008 23:36:25 GMT
THE sale of a Central Queensland coal project will help finance a massive expansion of the New Acland coal mine near Oakey.
Fitch Confirms Indiana Finance Authority Lease Bonds, Series 2003C&D at 'AA' (Centre Daily Times)
Fri, 18 Jul 2008 22:55:21 GMT
Fitch Ratings has confirmed its underlying 'AA' rating to the Indiana Finance Authority's (authority) conversion of $71,250,000 facilities revenue refunding bonds, series 2003C and 2003D to term-rate period from auction-rate securities. The bonds are expected to be offered via negotiation on July 24. Fitch also affirms at 'AA' approximately $3 billion of Indiana's appropriation debt. The Rating ...
Leading Structured Finance Lawyers, William "Butch" Cullen and Janet Barbiere Join Kaye Scholer LLP (Centre Daily Times)
Fri, 18 Jul 2008 20:13:33 GMT
Kaye Scholer LLP announced that William J. "Butch" Cullen and Janet A. Barbiere have joined the firm's Corporate & Finance Department, as Partners in its New York office, effective today.
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