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  • Welcome to the Investors Trading Academy talking glossary of financial terms and events.

  • Our word of the day is "Call" Traders just use the word "call" to signal

  • that an asset is going to move up, but it represents a financial contract between two

  • parties, the buyer and the seller. The buyer of the call option has the right, but not

  • the obligation to buy an agreed quantity of a particular commodity or financial instrument

  • from the seller of the option at a certain time for a certain price known as the strike

  • price. The seller is obligated to sell the commodity or financial instrument should the

  • buyer so decide. The buyer pays a fee called a premium for this right.

  • The buyer of a call option purchases it in the hope that the price of the underlying

  • instrument will rise in the future. The seller of the option either expects that it will

  • not, or is willing to give up some of the upside from a price rise in return for the

  • premium and retaining the opportunity to make a gain up to the strike price (see below for

  • examples). Call options are most profitable for the buyer

  • when the underlying instrument moves up, making the price of the underlying instrument closer

  • to, or above, and the strike price. The call buyer believes it's likely the price of the

  • underlying asset will rise by the expiry. The risk is limited to the premium. The profit

  • for the buyer can be very large, and is limited by how high the underlying instrument's spot

  • price rises. When the price of the underlying instrument surpasses the strike price, the

  • option is said to be "in the money".

Welcome to the Investors Trading Academy talking glossary of financial terms and events.

Subtitles and vocabulary

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