This lesson will walk a learner through the full concept of Call and Put Options, using real-life analogies, detailed examples, tabular comparisons, and visual understanding—ideal for building strong foundational clarity.
Introduction to Options
In the world of financial markets, options are contracts that offer flexibility, strategic control, and limited risk. But to use them effectively, one must first understand the two main types of options:
Call Options
Put Options
Each type gives the buyer a specific right—either to buy or sell an asset. These are used in various ways depending on whether a trader expects the market to rise, fall, or remain range-bound.
1. What is a Call Option?
A Call Option gives the buyer the right (not obligation) to buy a specific asset (stock, index, commodity, etc.) at a fixed price (called the strike price) on or before the expiry date.
When to Buy a Call Option:
You believe the price of an asset will rise.
You want to profit from upward movement using small capital.
You want limited loss, unlimited gain.
Example – Buying a Call Option
Underlying: Infosys
CMP: ₹1,450
Strike Price: ₹1,500
Premium: ₹30
Lot Size: 300 shares
Scenario A: Stock rises to ₹1,560
Buy at ₹1,500, Sell at ₹1,560
Gross Gain = ₹60 × 300 = ₹18,000
Net Profit = ₹18,000 – ₹9,000 (premium) = ₹9,000
Scenario B: Stock remains below ₹1,500
Do not exercise.
Loss = Premium paid = ₹9,000
Key Features of Call Options
Feature
Call Option Buyer
Right
To buy the asset
View
Bullish (expecting price to rise)
Risk
Limited to premium
Reward
Unlimited potential
Best Use
Leverage with controlled risk
2. What is a Put Option?
A Put Option gives the buyer the right (not obligation) to sell the underlying asset at the strike price before or on the expiry date.
When to Buy a Put Option:
You believe the asset’s price will fall.
You want to protect a stock portfolio from falling value.
You want to profit from a bearish outlook.
Example – Buying a Put Option
Underlying: Tata Steel
CMP: ₹130
Strike Price: ₹125
Premium: ₹4
Lot Size: 500 shares
Scenario A: Stock falls to ₹118
Sell at ₹125, Buy back at ₹118
Gross Profit = ₹7 × 500 = ₹3,500
Net Profit = ₹3,500 – ₹2,000 (premium) = ₹1,500
Scenario B: Stock remains above ₹125
Do not exercise.
Loss = Premium paid = ₹2,000
Key Features of Put Options
Feature
Put Option Buyer
Right
To sell the asset
View
Bearish (expecting price to fall)
Risk
Limited to premium
Reward
High (as prices fall toward zero)
Best Use
Hedging or directional bearish bets
Side-by-Side Comparison Table
Feature
Call Option
Put Option
Buyer’s Right
To buy the asset
To sell the asset
Seller’s Obligation
Must sell if exercised
Must buy if exercised
Used When
Expecting price to rise
Expecting price to fall
Profit Potential
Unlimited
Limited but significant
Loss Limited To
Premium paid
Premium paid
Hedging Use
Lock-in purchase cost
Insure against price drops
Visual Summary
Key Takeaways
The Call Option is used when you're bullish, offering unlimited upside with limited downside.
The Put Option is for bearish scenarios or protection, offering profit if the asset declines.
Both provide strategic flexibility, hedging capabilities, and controlled risk.
The buyer has no obligation, making options a risk-defined instrument for any market participant.