π Solutions for all 8 Types of P/L Problems
There are four types of options: long call, short call, long put, short put.
Each of the four types can either be βin the money (In The Money)β or βout of the money (Out of The Money).β Therefore, there are 8 possible types of P/L problem.
This page includes practice problems with solutions for each. If you are trying to solve an option P/L problem, you can look up an example of the corresponding type here.
Long Call (Buy a Call)
Long Call (Out of The Money)
βοΈ You have Bought a K=$100 Call. It is about to expire. Suppose S=$90 and Premium=$2.
- Will you exercise this option?
- What is your Per-Share Profit or Loss (P/L)?
β Click here to view answer
Short Answer:
- Out of The Money, so WON'T be exercised.
- P/L = -$2.
Full Explanation:
This Long Call allows you to buy shares of stock worth S=$90 for K=$100.
You could easily purchase the stock on the open market for $90, so exercising the option would mean overpaying by $10. We would think of this as a per-share $10 loss.
Clearly, you wonβt exercise the option, so it will just expire worthless. Because you canβt profitably exercise the option, we say the option is βOut of The Money (OTM)β and has no intrinsic value (IV=$0).
The only impact on your P/L is the $2 premium you paid. In hindsight, this money was wasted. P/L = -$2 (per share). Better luck next time!
Long Call (In The Money)
βοΈ You have Bought a K=$100 Call. It is about to expire. Suppose S=$110 and Premium=$2.
- Will you exercise this option?
- What is your Per-Share Profit or Loss (P/L)?
β Click here to view answer
Short Answer:
- In The Money, so WILL be exercised.
- P/L = $8.
Full Explanation:
This Long Call allows you to buy shares of stock worth S=$110 for K=$100. A mnemonic is that you can βCallβ the shares to you and someone else (your counterparty) will have to sell them to you for K=$100.
That is a discount of $10, so this option is βIn The Money (ITM)β and you will exercise it. When you exercise it, you will gain $10. This $10 is the option's intrinsic value.
(If you donβt want to buy more shares, you could easily exercise the option to buy them for K=$100 and then turn around and sell them on the market for S=$110, netting a $10 profit. You could even take out a short-term loan to do this.)
In addition to the $10 gain, you also paid a premium of $2. Therefore, your final P/L combines the $10 gain and the $2 loss: P/L = $10 - $2 = $8 (per share).
Short Call (Sell/Write a Call)
Short Call (Out of The Money)
βοΈ You have Sold/Written a K=$100 Call. It is about to expire. Suppose S=$90 and Premium=$2.
- Will this option be exercised?
- What is your Per-Share Profit or Loss (P/L)?
β Click here to view answer
Short Answer:
- Out of The Money, so WON'T be exercised.
- P/L = $2.
Full Explanation:
You have sold an option that obligates you to sell shares of stock worth S=$90 for K=$100 if requested.
You can think of yourself as being matched with a βcounterpartyβ who purchased the option you wrote/sold. Just as you have a Short Call, they have a Long Call. They decide whether to exercise the Long Call they purchased. If they do, you must sell them 100 shares of the underlying stock for K=$100.
From your counterparty's perspective, there is no way to make money by paying $100 for shares only worth $90. Therefore, we say this option is βOut of The Money (OTM)β and has no intrinsic value (IV=$0).
Given this, your counterparty wonβt exercise the option. The only impact on your P/L is the $2 premium your counterparty paid you. P/L = $2 (per share).
Short Call (In The Money)
βοΈ You have Sold/Written a K=$100 Call. It is about to expire. Suppose S=$110 and Premium=$2.
- Will this option be exercised?
- What is your Per-Share Profit or Loss (P/L)?
β Click here to view answer
Short Answer:
- In The Money, so WILL be exercised.
- P/L = -$8.
Full Explanation:
You have sold an option that obligates you to sell shares of stock worth S=$110 for only K=$100 if requested.
You can think of yourself as being matched with a βcounterpartyβ who purchased the option you wrote/sold. Just as you have a Short Call, they have a Long Call. They decide whether to exercise the Long Call they purchased. If they do, you must sell them 100 shares of the underlying stock for K=$100.
By purchasing your shares worth $110 for only $100 (a discount of $10), your counterparty can make $10 per share. Therefore, we say the option is βIn The Money (ITM)β and has an Intrinsic Value of $10 for its owner.
Weβll assume your counterparty will exercise the option. They will βCallβ for your shares to purchase them for K=$100. This will cause a loss for you of $10. For example, if you own the shares, you will have to sell them for $10 less than you could get on the open market. Alternatively, if you donβt have the shares, youβll have to buy them for $110 and sell them for $10 less. Either way, you are $10 poorer than you would be if your counterparty hadn't exercised the option. (Correspondingly, they are $10 richer. The IV of the option is both your loss and their gain.)
Offsetting the $10 loss from selling the shares, you also received a premium of $2. Your final per-share premium is P/L = $2 - $10 = -$8.
(For comparison, your counterparty's final P/L is $8. As always, one party's gain is the other party's loss.)
Long Put (Buy a Put)
Long Put (Out of The Money)
βοΈ You have Bought a K=$100 Put. It is about to expire. Suppose S=$110 and Premium=$2.
- Will you exercise this option?
- What is your Per-Share Profit or Loss (P/L)?
β Click here to view answer
Short Answer:
- Out of The Money, so WON'T be exercised.
- P/L = -$2.
Full Explanation:
This Long Put allows you to sell shares of stock worth S=$110 for K=$100.
There is no way to make money by selling something worth S=$110 for only K=$100. Because you canβt exercise the option to make money, we say the option is βOut of The Money (OTM)β and has no intrinsic value (IV=$0).
If you had shares you wanted to sell, you could easily sell them on the open market for $110. Exercising the option would mean being underpaid by $10, which we would think of as a $10 loss.
Clearly, you wonβt exercise the option, so it will just expire unexercised.
The only impact on your P/L is the $2 premium you paid. In hindsight, this money was wasted. P/L = -$2 (per share). Better luck next time!
Long Put (In The Money)
βοΈ You have Bought a K=$100 Put. It is about to expire. Suppose S=$90 and Premium=$2.
- Will you exercise this option?
- What is your Per-Share Profit or Loss (P/L)?
β Click here to view answer
Short Answer:
- In The Money, so WILL be exercised.
- P/L = $8.
Full Explanation:
This Long Put allows you to sell shares of stock worth S=$90 for K=$100. $100 is a great price for something only worth $90. It's a $10 premium.
A mnemonic is that you can βPutβ the shares out on the market and someone else (your counterparty) will have to buy them for K=$100.
If you have shares you want to sell, you can exercise the option to sell them for $10 extra. If you donβt have shares you want to sell, you could easily borrow money and buy the shares for $90 on the open market. You then exercise your option to sell the same shares for $100, pocketing a $10 profit.
Either way, the option βIn The Money (ITM)β. You will exercise it to gain the optionβs intrinsic value of $10.
In addition to the $10 gain, you also paid a premium of $2. Therefore, your final P/L combines the $10 gain and the $2 loss: P/L = $10 - $2 = $8 (per share).
Short Put (Sell/Write a Put)
Short Put (Out of The Money)
βοΈ You have Sold/Written a K=$100 Put. It is about to expire. Suppose S=$110 and Premium=$2.
- Will this option be exercised?
- What is your Per-Share Profit or Loss (P/L)?
β Click here to view answer
Short Answer:
- Out of The Money, so WON'T be exercised.
- P/L = $2.
Full Explanation:
You have sold an option that obligates you to buy shares of stock worth S=$110 for K=$100 if requested.
You can think of yourself as being matched with a βcounterpartyβ who purchased the option you wrote/sold. Just as you have a Short Put, they have a Long Put. They decide whether to exercise the Long Put they purchased. If they do, you must buy 100 shares of the underlying stock from them for K=$100.
There is no way for your counterparty to make money by selling you shares worth $110 for only $100. Therefore, we say this option is βOut of The Money (OTM)β and has no intrinsic value (IV=$0).
Given this, your counterparty wonβt exercise the option. The only impact on your P/L is the $2 premium your counterparty paid you. P/L = $2 (per share).
Short Put (In The Money)
βοΈ You have Sold/Written a K=$100 Put. It is about to expire. Suppose S=$90 and Premium=$2.
- Will this option be exercised?
- What is your Per-Share Profit or Loss (P/L)?
β Click here to view answer
Short Answer:
- In The Money, so WILL be exercised.
- P/L = -$8.
Full Explanation:
You have sold an option that obligates you to buy shares of stock worth S=$90 for K=$100 if requested.
You can think of yourself as being matched with a βcounterpartyβ who purchased the option you wrote/sold. Just as you have a Short Put, they have a Long Put. They decide whether to exercise the Long Put they purchased. If they do, you must buy 100 shares of the underlying stock from them for K=$100.
By selling shares worth $90 for $100 (a premium of $10), your counterparty can make $10 per share (at your expense). Therefore, we say the option is βIn The Money (ITM)β and has an Intrinsic Value of $10 for its owner.
Weβll assume your counterparty will exercise the option. Your counterparty will βPutβ the shares out there and you will have to buy them for $100. The shares are only worth $90, so you will overpay by $10. Just as your counterparty gains $10, you lose $10. The IV of the option is both their gain and your loss.
Offsetting your $10 loss from selling the shares, you have also already received a premium of $2 from your counterparty. Your final per-share premium is P/L = $2 - $10 = -$8.
(For comparison, your counterparty's final P/L is $8. As always, one party's gain is the other party's loss.)