Options Buzz: Tales from the Pit: Mister Softee Put Selling Sets Buyback Scenario
By Dan Colarusso Staff Reporter 3/26/98 4:41 PM ET
According to those in the pits, Goldman Sachs and Microsoft (MSFT:Nasdaq) have been working together in the options market and their union could have some interesting implications for Mister Softee traders.
The word floating around the floor of the Pacific Exchange, where Microsoft's options trade, is that the Redmond, Wash., software behemoth sold over-the-counter puts to Goldman's options desk, which in turn began selling similar puts into the P-Coast trading crowd, the market makers and traders who deal primarily with Mister Softee each day.
During the past week or so, P-Coast traders reported, Goldman was selling Microsoft puts at the 65 strike price in the July, October, January 1999 and January 2000 expiration cycles, traders said. None of the traders agreed to be identified. Open interest had climbed in each of those series, with the 1999 January 65 puts leading the way with more than 14,000 contracts in play. Open interest in the January 2000 options was 9,748 and hit 8,686 in the July 65 puts. The October 65 puts showed open interest of 5,600 this morning.
"Companies like Microsoft don't want to come to the listed markets with this kind of trade because they don't want people to know about it," said one P-Coast trader. "No one knows what strike or what month the company sold the puts to Goldman for. It could be any exotic combination."
A Microsoft spokesman declined to comment.
Goldman's sale of puts at the 65 strike is probably a good hint on the price level of the OTC options transaction.
Selling puts accomplishes two goals for Microsoft, traders said. The firm gets to take in premium from Goldman and if the options expire worthless, it can walk away happy. If, instead, Microsoft's shares slump the company is almost forced to repurchase its shares via the put sales at 65, effectively triggering a stock buyback and providing support for the stock.
"It's fairly common and an effective way to buy back stock," said one options house strategist. "And an effective way for Goldman to buy puts."
The strategist added that because the strike price was so far out-of-the-money, the trade was unlikely to have any impact on the stock price. "If they were trading closer to the strike price, it could affect the stock because traders would have to buy more stock to hedge," he said. "It would be fiscally irresponsible to shareholders."
With Goldman then selling puts in the listed market, the price of protection came down and market makers were more than happy to lap it up. Because market makers are typically long the stock, they'll sell calls and buy some protection in the form of the cheap puts Goldman was peddling. The excess inventory on the floor effectively kept Microsoft's implied volatility low on Wednesday, despite the stock's quick 5-point jump. Traders didn't mind seeing that either.
Goldman also declined to comment, citing the firm's policy of not discussing its trading strategies.
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