Selling Naked Put Options: How to Get Paid to Buy Stocks





Right now, bunches of savvy investors are getting paid cold, hard cash for nothing more than agreeing to buy stocks. Investors are giving them money to buy stock that they were looking to purchase anyway.

Sound crazy? Well it isn’t.

There’s an incredibly profitable, but little-known trading and investment strategy that you will come to love as much as I do because of all the “instant cash” it can generate for you.

In the lucrative world of options trading, this strategy is called “selling a naked put option.”

Sounds sexy, and to some it is, but really it’s an incredibly simple way to buy stock you want to purchase at a specific price – while having someone pay you to do it. It’s easy to do but there are a few things you need to know first…

Here’s how you can use this powerful options strategy to get paid for buying stocks.

Understanding Put Option Contracts

If someone has a bearish outlook for a particular stock, they can either sell the stock short or purchase a put option contract. My colleague, Karim Rahemtulla, discussed put options at length in “Short Selling Strategies” last week, but there are some terms to be aware of.

  • When you purchase a put option contract, you gain the right to sell that particular stock at a particular price within a specified period of time. To do this, you must pay a fixed amount of money upfront, which is called the “option premium” to the option seller.
  • The option seller gets to keep this upfront cash regardless of any future outcome of the transaction.
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  • The amount at which you can sell the stock is determined ahead of time by the “strike price” – the only price you’ll sell the stock at.
  • The time period that the option is active for is also determined ahead of time – and it’s referred to as the “expiration date.”

So as a put option buyer, if the stock you choose ends up falling in price below the strike price you have chosen within the time frame, you will have a winning trade.

It sounds simple enough for most investors to make money hand over fist, but it’s not.

  • In about 80% to 90% of option buyer’s transactions, the option will expire worthless and the option buyer ends up forfeiting the option premium he paid upfront to the option seller.
  • Most option buyers (both calls and puts) do not end up picking the correct strike price and expiration period to give them a profitable trade.

So who really comes out ahead? The option seller of course – he gets to walk away free and clear with the money. So let’s put ourselves on that side of the trade.

The Secret to Selling Options

Sounds like being an option seller is no-brainer? Well, it is – if you do it correctly.

For getting paid upfront, the option seller also has an obligation to fill if certain conditions arise. His obligation is to buy the stock from the option buyer (remember, the option buyer wants the stock to fall in price) if the stock falls to a certain price within the expiration time period.

Here’s where it gets good.

As a put option seller, you also can determine ahead of time where you would feel comfortable buying a stock if it dropped in price, and then collect the cash from the option buyer.

This is how to be a smart put-option seller – only sell put option contracts at strike prices at which you would like to own the stock if called upon to do so.

That’s it.

The secret to selling naked put options is to pick a stock that you would potentially like to own at a cheaper price than where it currently trades, sell the corresponding strike price, collect the money from the option buyer, and then sit back and wait until option expiration to occur.

These are the profitable types of trades we do all the time.

In fact, since launching The Instant Money Trader service in November 2008, we’ve had a 100% win streak, meaning all the options have expired worthless, allowing us to bank all the money paid to us upfront from the option buyers.

And it couldn’t have been easier.

Good investing,

Lee Lowell
Investment U

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