Thursday, June 21, 2012

Series 7 Exam - Options

Here is some great series 7 exam information regarding how buyers and sellers of options manage, enter and  exit option trades

Managing an Option Position


Both the buyer and seller, in an option trade, establish the position with an opening transaction. The buyer has an opening purchase and the seller has an opening sale. To exit the option position, an investor must “close out” the position. The buyer of the option may exit their position through:


 A Closing Sale

 Exercising The Option

 Allowing The Option To Expire


The Seller of an option may exit or close out their position through:


 A Closing Purchase

 Having the Option Exercised or Assigned to Them

 Allowing The Option to Expire


Most individual investors do not exercise their options and will simply buy and sell options in much the same way as they would buy or sell other securities.

Take some free series 7 exam questions on our site at:
 
http://www.securitiesce.com/web/pages/series7/index.php

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Monday, June 18, 2012

Free Series 7 Exam Tip

Here is some good information for the series 7 exam relating to short sales:

Short Sales


An investor, who believes that a stock price has appreciated too far and is likely to decline, may profit from this belief by selling the stock short. In a short sale, the customer borrows the security in order to complete delivery to the buying party. The investor sells the stock high hoping that they can buy it back cheaper and replace it. It is a perfectly legitimate investment strategy. The investor’s first transaction is a sell and they exit the position by repurchasing the stock. The short sale of stock has unlimited risk because there is no limit to how high the stock price may go. The investor will lose money if the stock appreciates past their sales price.

Affirmative Determination


All firms and agents are required to make an affirmative determination for all sell orders entered on behalf of the firm or a customer. All sell orders must be marked either long or short. A person is considered long the security if the investor:


 Has possession of the security

 Has purchased the security but the trade has not settled

 Has issued conversion or exercise instructions for a right, warrant, option, convertible bond or preferred stock


 If the investor owns rights, warrants, options, or a convertible security but has not issued exercise or conversion instructions the investor is not considered long the security.



The firm must make a determination if the customer is long the security or if they are selling short. If the customer is selling short, the firm must determine if the security can be borrowed for delivery.


An investor is only considered long the security to the extent of their net long position in the security. If an investor is long 1000 shares of ABC and is short 600 shares of ABC in another account, the investor may only mark a sell ticket for 400 shares of ABC long.

Take some free series 7 exam questions on our site at:

http://www.securitiesce.com/web/pages/series7/index.php



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