Options & Derivatives – Hedging Risks and Generating Income

What Are Options & Derivatives?

Derivatives are financial contracts deriving value from underlying assets (stocks, indices, commodities).

Options are a type of derivative granting the right (not obligation) to buy/sell assets at a fixed price (strike price) by a set date.

Key Terms for Beginners

  • Call Option: Right to buy an asset (e.g., Reliance shares) at a strike price.
  • Put Option: Right to sell an asset at a strike price.
  • Premium: Price paid to buy an option.
  • Expiry Date: When the contract expires (weekly, monthly).

Why Use Derivatives?

  1. Hedging Risks (Insurance for Your Portfolio)
  • Example: Hold 100 Infosys shares worth ₹15,000 each. Buy a ₹14,500 put option (cost: ₹200/share).
    • If Infosys drops to ₹13,000: Exercise the put to sell at ₹14,500, limiting loss.
    • If Infosys rises: Let the option expire, losing only the ₹200 premium.
  1. Generating Income (Earn Premiums)
  • Covered Call Strategy: Own 100 TCS shares (₹3,500/share). Sell a call option at ₹3,600 strike (premium: ₹50/share).
    • If TCS < ₹3,600: Keep ₹5,000 premium (₹50 x 100 shares).
    • If TCS ≥ ₹3,600: Sell shares at ₹3,600, earning ₹10,000 profit + ₹5,000 premium.

Top 3 Derivatives Strategies for Indian Investors

StrategyRisk LevelBest ForExample (Nifty 50)
Protective PutLowHedging stock portfoliosBuy Nifty put option to protect against market crashes.
Covered CallModerateIncome generationSell calls on HDFC Bank shares you already own.
Long StraddleHighVolatility betsBuy Nifty call + put before budget announcements.

How to Start Trading Derivatives in India

  1. Open a Demat & Trading Account: Use platforms like Zerodha, Upstox, or Angel One.
  2. Learn Basics: Complete NCFM’s Derivatives Market Module or NSE’s certification.
  3. Practice with Virtual Money: Use Zerodha’s Streak or TradingView’s paper trading.
  4. Start Small: Trade weekly Nifty/Bank Nifty options (lower capital requirement).

SEBI Regulations & Tax Rules

  • SEBI Guidelines:
    • Derivatives trading allowed only on exchanges (NSE/BSE).
    • Intraday leverage capped at 5x for equities.
  • Taxation:
    • Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG): Profits from derivatives taxed at 15% (equity) or slab rate (commodities).
    • Speculative Losses: Can’t offset against other income.

Risks of Derivatives Trading

  • High Volatility: Options can expire worthless (e.g., 70% of options traders lose money).
  • Leverage Risks: Amplifies losses (e.g., 5x leverage on ₹1L = ₹5L exposure).
  • Complexity: Requires understanding Greeks (Delta, Theta, Vega).

FAQs

  1. How do options work in the stock market?
    Options let you buy/sell assets at predetermined prices, offering flexibility for hedging or income.

  2. What is the best derivatives strategy for beginners?
    Start with covered calls on blue-chip stocks (e.g., HDFC Bank, Reliance) to earn premiums safely.

  3. Are derivatives legal in India?
    Yes, SEBI-regulated derivatives (equity, currency, commodity) are legal on NSE/BSE.


Action Steps for You

  1. Learn Option Greeks: Understand Delta (price sensitivity) and Theta (time decay).
  2. Paper Trade: Test strategies on Zerodha’s Kite platform without real money.
  3. Analyze Nifty Options Chain: Identify support/resistance levels for strike prices.

Key Takeaways

  • Hedging > Speculation: Use derivatives to protect your portfolio, not gamble.
  • Start Small: Allocate <5% of capital to derivatives until proficient.
  • Stay Updated: Track SEBI guidelines and global events (Fed rates, geopolitical risks).

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