Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ======Long Call====== A Long Call is an [[options contract]] that gives the buyer the //right//, but not the //obligation//, to purchase a specific amount of an underlying asset (like 100 shares of a stock) at a predetermined price on or before a specific date. Think of it as putting down a small, non-refundable deposit to lock in a future purchase price for something you believe will become much more valuable. You pay a fee, called the [[premium]], for this right. If the asset's price soars above your locked-in price (the [[strike price]]), you can exercise your right to buy cheap and potentially sell high for a handsome profit. If the price goes down or stays flat, you can simply let the option expire, and your maximum loss is just the "deposit"—the premium you paid. It is a fundamentally bullish strategy, meaning you're betting that the price of the underlying asset will rise significantly before the [[expiration date]]. ===== Why Buy a Call Option? ===== Investors are drawn to long calls for two main reasons: incredible leverage and strictly defined risk. It's a potent combination, but one that requires careful handling. ==== Spectacular Leverage ==== [[Leverage]] is the name of the game here. For a relatively small cost (the premium), you can control a large number of shares. A $500 investment in a call option might control 100 shares of a $100 stock (a $10,000 position). If the stock price makes a big move in your favor, the percentage return on your $500 premium can be astronomical, far exceeding what you would have made by buying the shares outright. This ability to magnify gains is the primary allure of buying calls. ==== Capped Downside Risk ==== This is the beautiful flip side of the leverage coin. When you buy a stock, your potential loss is the entire amount you invested if the company goes bankrupt. With a long call, your risk is absolutely, positively capped at the premium you paid for the option. If your bet is wrong and the stock price tanks, the most you can ever lose is the initial cost of the contract. This creates an asymmetric risk profile: limited, defined losses with the potential for outsized gains. ===== A Simple Example: Betting on Gizmo Inc. ===== Let's make this real. Imagine shares of Gizmo Inc. are trading at $50. You've done your homework and believe a new product launch will send the stock to $65 within two months. You have two choices: * **Path 1: Buy the Stock.** You buy 100 shares of Gizmo Inc. for a total cost of 100 x $50 = $5,000. * **Path 2: Buy a Long Call.** You find a call option with a $55 strike price that expires in three months. The premium is $3 per share. Since one contract typically controls 100 shares, your total cost is $3 x 100 = $300. Now, let's see how things play out in two months. === Scenario A: You Were Right! (Stock hits $65) === * **Path 1 (Stock):** Your 100 shares are now worth $6,500. Your profit is $6,500 - $5,000 = $1,500. A solid 30% return on your investment. * **Path 2 (Call Option):** Your option is "in-the-money." You have the right to buy 100 shares at $55. You can exercise the option and immediately sell them at the market price of $65. Your gross profit is ($65 - $55) x 100 = $1,000. After subtracting your initial $300 cost, your **net profit is $700**. While less than the stock profit in absolute dollars, your return on investment is a staggering $700 / $300 = 233%! === Scenario B: You Were Wrong (Stock drops to $40) === * **Path 1 (Stock):** Your 100 shares are now worth $4,000. You have an unrealized loss of $1,000. * **Path 2 (Call Option):** The option is "out-of-the-money" and worthless. You let it expire. Your total loss is **limited to the $300 premium** you paid. You lost 100% of your investment, but it's a far smaller loss in dollar terms. ===== A Value Investor's Cautionary Note ===== Value investors, including luminaries like [[Warren Buffett]], generally prefer owning a piece of a business outright (the stock) to speculating on short-term price movements with derivatives. Options are decaying assets; they have an expiration date, which introduces a timing element that is notoriously difficult to predict. The core of value investing is buying great companies at fair prices and holding them for the long term, letting the value compound without the ticking clock of an options contract. However, some sophisticated investors might use long-dated calls, known as [[LEAPS]], as a partial stock substitute. This can be a way to establish a position in a company with less upfront capital, but it remains a complex strategy. For the vast majority of value-oriented investors, the best path is the simplest one: **Buy the business, not the bet.** ===== Key Risks to Keep in Mind ===== * **Time Decay ([[Theta]]):** This is the silent enemy of the call buyer. Every day that passes, your option loses a small amount of its value, even if the stock price stays perfectly still. You are not just betting on //if// the price will rise, but that it will rise //fast enough// to overcome this daily decay. * **Volatility Crush:** The price of an option is heavily influenced by [[implied volatility]]—the market's expectation of future price swings. If you buy a call when volatility is high (e.g., before an earnings report) and the expected big move doesn't happen, the option's price can "crush" downward even if the stock price moves slightly in your favor. * **Losing 100%:** While your loss is capped, it is very common for call options to expire worthless. If the stock price does not rise above the strike price by expiration, your entire investment is gone. It's an all-or-nothing proposition far more often than it's a home run.