RE: GoPro (GPRO)
I'm not discussing whether or not to buy or sell this particular stock! It's just a great example for Investing 102.. that is "Current". I wish I'd have been smart enough to buy some - and flip it out up 100%... but I stay away from this stuff because of my own personal situation. EVERYONE needs to do what is RIGHT for THEMSELVES given their age - their guts - their situation.
I found this - which is WAY TOO COMPLICATED FOR INVESTING 102.... but what I'm using this for is to try to explain that there are many more things "behind the scenes" than we really need to know for our purposes here. WE HAVE NEVER DISCUSSED SHORTING a stock - because I don't think it's appropriate for INVESTING. Shorting is "trading".
Interesting......
As the current authors discovered, borrowing the stock proved to be extraordinarily expensive. Demand for shares to short was so great that security firms were charging a fee of 100% per year to borrow the stock. This fee essentially eliminates the possibility of pure arbitrage. Such massive fees are also further evidence that the market for the stock is not functioning properly.
The bottom line is that the option market is flashing warning lights that say investors should approach the stock with great caution. The combination of a sky high price relative to earnings and the dramatic rise in the cost of put options compared to put-call parity suggest that a sharp drop in the stock price is a distinct possibility.
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A "PUT" is the ability to BUY A PUT --- or SELL a PUT --- which allows you to PUT your shares to whomever is on the other side of the trade...
Let's say you buy a put on GPRO:
You'd buy a "PUT" when you think the price of the stock is going DOWN... essentially betting that the FUTURE price at some date - is going to be lower than it is now... and you get to PUT that stock to the other side at that price that was stated in the put ----
So let's say you bought a put at a strike price of $100 that expires on Dec 1st... and the shares are at $90 today. Rather than sell at 90 today - you buy the put - which says you can get $100 for the shares on that future date as the buyer MUST take the shares regardless of the price -- even if the shares had fallen to $75. The PRICE or COST of the PUT is determined by the risk... or what people are willing to bet one way or the other.
The opposite of this market is called a CALL OPTION.... that's where you'd buy the right to BUY shares at "X" price in the future... betting that the shares are going up to "X" by X date (the strike price and the expiration date of the option).
A quicky example is that you might buy 100 share call option - betting that on Dec 1 they're going to be $100 -- and the right to be able to do that transaction is going to cost you $10 per share. You'd only have to pay $1000 for the "right" to be able to buy 100 shares at $100 ($10,000)... and if the shares are trading at $125 when your call is dated (the expiration date).....well you just paid $11,000 for a stock that's worth $12,500.... and you only "risked" the $1000.
It's of course much more complicated than all of this.... and it's a traders market -- and there is an "options" market that does nothing but trade these puts and calls -- it's completely different than the INVESTING we're talking about here.
My old boat was named "Options".... and I should have named the dingy "puts and calls".... as the dingy is often used for taking people to shore or picking them up.... HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
OPTIONS:
The boat I should have named "Puts and Calls":