Futures 101 - Chapter 28: How Option Premiums are Determined

Article Index
Futures 101
Chapter 2: Futures Markets What, Why And Who
Chapter 3: The Market Participants
Chapter 4: What is a Futures Contract?
Chapter 5: The Process of Price Discovery
Chapter 6: Gains and Losses on Futures Contracts
Chapter 7: The Arithmetic of Futures Trading and Leverage
Chapter 8: Margins
Chapter 9: Basic Trading Strategies
Chapter 10: Position Limits
Chapter 11: Minimum Price Changes
Chapter 12: Regulation of Futures Trading
Chapter 13: Establishing an Account
Chapter 14: What to Look For in a Futures Contract
Chapter 15: The Contract Unit
Chapter 16: How Prices Are Quoted
Chapter 17: Minimum Price Changes
Chapter 18: Daily Price Limits
Chapter 19: Position Limits
Chapter 20: Understanding (and managing) the Risks of Futures Trading
Chapter 21: Choosing a Futures Contract
Chapter 22: Liquidity
Chapter 23: Stop Orders
Chapter 24: Spreads
Chapter 25: Options on Futures Contracts
Chapter 26: Buying Call Options
Chapter 27: Buying Put Options
Chapter 28: How Option Premiums are Determined
Chapter 29: Selling Options
Chapter 30: In Closing
All Pages

Introduction to Futures Trading 101
Published By: National Futures Association

Option premiums are determined the same way futures prices are determined, through active competition between buyers and sellers. Three major variables influence the premium for a given option:

  • The option’s exercise price, or more specifically, the relationship between the exercise price and the current price of the underlying futures contract. All else being equal, an option that is already worthwhile to exercise (known as an "in-the-money" option) commands a higher premium than an option that is not yet worthwhile to exercise (an "out-of-the-money" option). For example, if a gold contract is currently selling at $290 an ounce, a put option conveying the right to sell gold at $310 an ounce is more valuable than a put option that conveys the right to sell gold at only $280 an ounce.
  • The length of time remaining until expiration. All else being equal, an option with a long period of time remaining until expiration commands a higher premium than an option with a short period of time remaining until expiration because it has more time in which to become profitable. Said another way, an option is an eroding asset; its time value declines as it approaches expiration.
  • The volatility of the underlying futures con-tract. All else being equal, the greater the volatility the higher the option premium. In a volatile market, the option stands a greater chance of becoming profitable.