Buying And Selling Call Options -
The stock price is higher than the strike price.
You don't have to wait for expiration. You can "sell to close" a bought call or "buy to close" a sold call at any time to lock in profits or cut losses. buying and selling call options
Limited to the premium you paid. If the stock doesn’t reach the strike price by expiration, the option expires worthless, and you lose 100% of your investment. The stock price is higher than the strike price
A is a contract that gives the buyer the right (but not the obligation) to buy 100 shares of a stock at a specific price ( Strike Price ) before a certain date ( Expiration ). 2. Buying Call Options (Bullish) Limited to the premium you paid
Options lose value every day they get closer to expiration. As a buyer, time is your enemy; as a seller, time is your friend.
Short-term dates (weeks) are cheaper but riskier; long-term dates (months/years) give you more time to be right.
The stock stays below the strike price. You keep the entire premium as profit.