One big investor is riding a megabank on the cheap, thanks to the leveraging power of options.
Bank of America (BAC) has been on the move since late 2016. A large call roll yesterday seemed to show that a money manager is using options as a surrogate for owning roughly 2.25 million shares in the financial giant:
- A block of 22,500 January 15 calls were sold for $15.70. These contracts expire at the start of next year.
- A bock of 22,500 January 2020 20 calls was bought for $11.25 in a new opening trade. These contracts expire a year later.
Calls fix the price where a security can be purchased, so they tend to appreciate when a stock rallies. It looks like Thursday’s trader owned the 15 calls and had made money from BAC’s longer-term uptrend. He or she then sold those contracts and rolled their position into the 20s.
Making the adjustment let them collect a credit of $4.45, and gives them an additional year of upside exposure. Will they repeat the transaction in the future to take more profits if BAC keeps running? Maybe.
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Bank of America (BAC) with 50- and 200-day moving averages.
The strategy is noteworthy because it used deep-in-the-money options with a very high delta. That essentially lets them chop off the lower two-thirds off the stock price. That, in turn, means less capital is at risk. And that, in turn, creates the potential for more leverage on a percentage basis. (Of course, they can still lose money if the shares decline. See our Knowledge Center for more.)
BAC rose 1.38 percent to $30.72 yesterday. The call roll was the single largest options transaction for any equity in the market yesterday. Calls outnumbered puts in the name by more than 4 to 1.