Blue Month

  

“Once in a blue moon…” goes the song from Little Mary Sunshine, a musical which you've, uh...never heard of.

Or...perhaps you’re familiar with the common expression, as in, “Once in a blue moon, Pat will buy a round of drinks.”

Referring to a month that has two full moons instead of the usual one, the term blue moon has now come to mean a rare event.

And the moon isn’t even necessarily blue. In the finance world, a blue month is one in which trading on options and futures contracts are the most active. It could happen in any particular month, but hedge fund managers and large financial institutions study a blue month to find any trading signals that indicate whether the market will go up or down.

Example.

Maureen owns 15,000 shares of Future for You, Inc. that are valued at $2.50 a share. Looking at the general direction of the market, she starts to worry that the price could go down. So she decides to protect herself, entering into a futures contract with James, who thinks the price will go up.

Their contract states that James will buy Maureen’s 15,000 shares one year from now at $2.50. When many such contracts are taking place during the same month, that’s a blue one.

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Finance: What Is a Put Option?83 Views

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finance a la shmoop what is a put option? hot potato hot potato

00:07

ow ow! yeah remember that game well nobody wanted the potato, poor thing. the

00:11

players wanted to put it in someone else's hands. well put options kind [glue put around a flaming potato]

00:18

of work the same way. a put option is the right or option or choice to sell a

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stock or a bond at a given price to someone by a certain end date.

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all right example time. you bought netflix stock at the IPO a zillion years

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ago at $1 a share. that's you know splits adjusted. all right now it's a hundred

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bucks a share. if you sell it you pay taxes on a gain of 99 dollars a share. in

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California that would be a tax of something like almost 40 bucks. well the

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stock was a hundred but you keep only something like 60. feels totally unfair.

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right so you really don't want to sell your stock but you're nervous about the [graph shown]

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next few months that Netflix will crater for a while and go down ten

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maybe twenty dollars. longer term though you think it'll hit 300. so this is the

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perfect setup to maybe look at buying some put options on Netflix. if the stock

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goes down your put options go up. with Netflix volatile but at a hundred bucks

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a share ,you look up the price of an $80 strike price put option expiring in

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December, and you know that's mid-september now .for five bucks a share

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you can protect your stock for the next few months .think about it like temporary [stocks placed in vault]

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term life insurance. you pay the five dollars a share in the stock goes down

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to 82 by mid December, worst of all worlds. well not only did you lose the $5

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a share but your stock has lost $18 in value. but had Netflix really cratered

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and gone to say $60 a share well you would have exercised your put and sold

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your shares at 80 bucks. well those put options you paid $5 for

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would be been worth 15 bucks a share. in buying that put option you've [equation shown]

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guaranteed that your loss will be no more than a $75 value for your Netflix

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position at least for that time period and ignoring taxes. well remember that

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options expire after December whatever like the third Friday of the month it's

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usually when options expire, you then have no protection and your shares float

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along naked. naked? really who knew accounting could get so [paper put option goes "skinny dipping".]

02:36

raunchy. yeah well that's naked put options.

02:40

that's what they really are people.

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