LEAPS
LEAPS (an acronym for Long-term Equity Anticipation Securities) are a special class of options contracts with expiration dates that are much further into the future than standard options. While a typical option might expire in a few weeks or months, LEAPS have a lifespan of one to three years. They come in two flavours: call options (a bet that the price will rise) and put options (a bet that the price will fall). Think of them as giving you a very long runway to be right about a stock's future direction. For this extended time horizon, you pay a higher upfront cost, or premium, compared to a short-term option. This higher cost reflects the increased time value—essentially, you're paying for the luxury of time and the greater opportunity for the stock to make a significant move in your favour before the contract expires.
How LEAPS Work
At their core, LEAPS function exactly like standard options, just with a much longer clock.
- A LEAPS Call gives the holder the right, but not the obligation, to buy 100 shares of an underlying stock at a predetermined price (the strike price) anytime before its distant expiration date. Investors buy these when they are bullish on a stock over the long term.
- A LEAPS Put gives the holder the right, but not the obligation, to sell 100 shares of a stock at the strike price before expiration. These are for investors who are bearish on a stock's long-term prospects.
The key difference is that the long lifespan dramatically changes the strategy. The slow rate of time decay (also known as theta decay) is a major advantage. With short-term options, time is a fierce enemy, as the option's value can evaporate quickly as expiration approaches. With LEAPS, time decay is much less of a factor in the early stages of the contract's life, allowing an investor's thesis to play out over months or even years.
LEAPS in a Value Investing Framework
While options are often associated with speculation, value investors can use LEAPS tactically, most famously through a “stock replacement” strategy. It’s a way to express a long-term, value-oriented view with less capital at risk.
The "Stock Replacement" Strategy
Imagine you've analysed a company and believe its stock, currently trading at $100, is significantly undervalued and will be worth much more in two years.
- The Traditional Approach: Buy 100 shares for a total cost of $10,000 (100 shares x $100/share). Your maximum loss is the full $10,000 if the company goes bankrupt.
- The LEAPS Approach: Instead of buying the shares, you could buy one LEAPS call option with a strike price of $100 that expires in two years. This contract controls 100 shares. Let's say the premium for this option is $20 per share, for a total cost of $2,000 ($20 x 100 shares).
Advantages of Stock Replacement
- Capital Efficiency: You gain exposure to the stock's potential upside for just $2,000 instead of $10,000. The remaining $8,000 is freed up to invest elsewhere, improving your diversification. This is a form of leverage.
- Defined Risk: Your maximum loss is capped at the $2,000 premium you paid. If the company performs poorly and the stock price falls to $50, the traditional investor has lost $5,000 on paper. You, the LEAPS holder, have only lost your initial $2,000 investment.
The Catches and Caveats
For a value investor, using LEAPS as a stock substitute is not a free lunch. It changes the nature of the investment.
- No Ownership Rights: As an option holder, you are not a shareholder. You do not get to vote, and more importantly, you do not receive any dividends. If the company pays a hefty dividend, that's a return you are forgoing.
- The Breakeven Hurdle: For the LEAPS trade to be profitable at expiration, the stock doesn't just need to rise; it needs to rise above the breakeven point, which is the strike price plus the premium paid. In our example, the stock must be above $120/share ($100 strike + $20 premium) for you to make a profit.
- Finite Lifespan: Value investing icons like Warren Buffett often talk about a holding period of “forever.” LEAPS fundamentally conflict with this, as they have a hard expiration date. They are a tool for a specific thesis with a time limit, not a true long-term “buy-and-hold” investment.
Key Takeaways
- What They Are: LEAPS are simply options contracts with long-term expiration dates (1-3 years).
- How They're Used: Primarily to make long-term bets on a stock's direction with less capital than buying the stock outright.
- For Value Investors: The stock replacement strategy offers a capital-efficient, risk-defined way to act on a value thesis.
- The Downsides: LEAPS have a finite life, are subject to time decay (albeit slowly), do not provide dividends or ownership rights, and require the stock to outperform a breakeven price. They are a powerful tool but must be used with a clear understanding of their unique risks and limitations.