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Strategies & Market Trends : The Thread Formerly Known as No Rest For The Wicked -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bald Eagle who wrote (77003)12/9/1999 4:13:00 PM
From: R.E.B.  Respond to of 90042
 
Bald Eagle, the seller of the call always keeps the money he or she received. The purchaser of the call has the power to call the stock away on OR BEFORE the expiration of the call.

Typically, the purchaser of the call will sell the calls on the open market to get their profit [to an arbitraguer (sp)] at this point who will call the stock away and tender it to the buyer of the company according to the instructions for tendering shares.

There is no rebate or anything like that.



To: Bald Eagle who wrote (77003)12/9/1999 4:16:00 PM
From: Kik  Respond to of 90042
 
Bald....I wondered the same thing. edit...already answered



To: Bald Eagle who wrote (77003)12/9/1999 7:22:00 PM
From: Samuel Wayne Turner  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 90042
 
When someone sells a call on a stock, the premium is immediately placed in that persons account(seller of calls account). The buyer of the call takes ownership of the call and all its rewards and hazards. If after selling a Jan 2001 call on 12-09-99, the stock were to be bought out tomorrow on 12-10-99, the BUYER of the calls could sell the call for any profit or loss, or hold it until expiration. Usually, you lose the time premium in a buyout. That is to say, If you bought 10 NN Jan 2001 call options with a strike price of 25 for $5,000 dollars and the stock sold for 30, you would only break even. Therefore, if you are buying calls on immediate buyout speculation, the smart money always buys short term calls like the Jan 2000 or the March 2000 calls and doesnt pay for the extra time premium. I have bought 10 March 2000 20 strike calls on NN last month on buyout speculation. I paid $ 3,612 dollars for them. I could have bought calls with a longer time horizion, but I bought them thinking if NN was going to be bought, it would likely be bought by then. I didnt buy the Jan calls because I thought it might be late Jan or Feb before a deal was acutally hammered out, but also reasoned that if it were going to go, it would likely have been sold by mid-March. I hope this helps, if you have other questions just shout, I am always lurking around somewhere.



To: Bald Eagle who wrote (77003)12/10/1999 12:31:00 AM
From: Jeff O'Brien  Respond to of 90042
 
One other angle to know is that if you bought Jan. 35 LEAPS on CS (or any month) for $5/share and CS was bought for a cash deal of $33, you would lose out totally. Because CS would never have a chance of reaching your strike price, you would lose all.

Jeff