Foundations

What is an Option?

An option is a contract that gives its buyer the right — but not the obligation — to buy or sell an underlying asset at a fixed price before a set date, in exchange for a premium paid to the seller.

In one line: An option is a contract that gives its buyer the right — but not the obligation — to buy or sell an underlying asset at a fixed price before a set date, in exchange for a premium paid to the seller.

In simple words

An option is like a token that locks in a price. If you think Nifty will rise, you can buy a call option that lets you profit from the rise while risking only the small premium you paid. You are never forced to act — if the trade goes against you, you simply let the option expire and lose only the premium. The seller, who collected that premium, takes on the obligation in return.

Visual

What is an Option?

The payoff of a long call: losses are capped at the premium paid, while profit grows once the underlying rises past the strike plus premium.

20000BE 20200+808+2500-308Underlying price at expiry

The four ingredients of every option

Every option contract has four defining features: the underlying (e.g., Nifty, Bank Nifty, or a stock), the option type (call or put), the strike price (the fixed price at which you can transact), and the expiry date (when the contract dies). Add the premium — the market price of the option — and you have everything needed to define the trade. In India, index options like Nifty and Bank Nifty are the most heavily traded and are cash-settled.

Rights versus obligations

The defining feature of an option is asymmetry. The buyer has a right and pays for it; the seller has an obligation and gets paid for it. A call buyer can choose to buy at the strike; a put buyer can choose to sell at the strike. The seller must honour that choice if the buyer exercises. This is why a buyer's loss is capped at the premium while a naked seller's risk can be far larger — they are compensated with the premium and the high probability that the option expires worthless.

Why options exist

Options serve two core purposes: speculation and hedging. A trader with a directional view can use a small premium to gain leveraged exposure to a large move. An investor holding a portfolio can buy puts as insurance against a crash. Businesses and institutions use options to manage risk on currencies, commodities and rates. The same instrument that lets a retail trader bet ₹15,000 on a Nifty move lets a fund hedge crores of exposure.

Calls and puts in one sentence each

A call option profits when the underlying rises — it is the bullish building block. A put option profits when the underlying falls — it is the bearish building block. Every options strategy, from a simple Long Call to a four-legged Iron Condor, is just a combination of calls and puts, bought and sold at different strikes and expiries. Master these two contracts and everything else is arithmetic.

Practical example (Nifty)

Illustrative — Nifty, lot size 75

Nifty is at 20,000. You believe it will rise before Thursday's weekly expiry, so you buy one 20,000 call (CE) for a premium of ₹200. With a lot size of 75, your total cost — and maximum possible loss — is ₹200 × 75 = ₹15,000. If Nifty climbs to 20,400, the call is worth about ₹400, so you gain (400 − 200) × 75 = ₹15,000. If Nifty stays at or below 20,000, the call expires worthless and you lose the ₹15,000 premium — but never a rupee more.

Option buyer vs option seller

BuyerSeller
Pays / receivesPays premiumReceives premium
Right / obligationHas the rightHas the obligation
Maximum lossLimited to premiumLarge / open-ended (if naked)
Maximum profitLarge / unlimitedLimited to premium
Time decay (Theta)Works against youWorks for you
Wins most often whenA big, fast move happensThe market stays calm

Why it matters in practice

  • Buying options gives leveraged, defined-risk exposure — your maximum loss is known upfront (the premium).
  • Selling options collects premium but takes on obligation and open-ended risk unless the position is hedged.
  • Every strategy is a combination of calls and puts — learn these two contracts first.
  • Indian index options (Nifty, Bank Nifty) are cash-settled, so there is no delivery of shares at expiry.

Common mistakes

  • Treating options like lottery tickets — buying cheap far-OTM options and expecting frequent wins.
  • Selling naked options without understanding the open-ended risk and margin obligations.
  • Confusing the premium (what you pay) with the strike (the fixed transaction price).
  • Ignoring expiry — an option is a wasting asset that loses value every day it stays out-of-the-money.

What professionals do

Experienced traders think of options as tools for shaping risk, not just directional bets. They choose whether to be a buyer (defined risk, fighting time decay) or a seller (collecting premium, managing tail risk) based on volatility and probability, and they always know their maximum loss in rupees before entering. They respect that the option premium already prices in the market's expectations, so an edge comes from a differentiated view, not from the direction alone.

Key takeaway

An option is a right, not an obligation, bought for a premium. Buyers risk only the premium for leveraged exposure; sellers collect the premium but take on obligation. Two contracts — calls and puts — are the foundation of everything in options trading.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an option in simple terms?
An option is a contract giving you the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell an asset at a fixed price before a set date, for which you pay a premium. Calls profit when the asset rises; puts profit when it falls.
What is the difference between a call and a put?
A call option gives the right to buy the underlying at the strike and profits when prices rise. A put option gives the right to sell at the strike and profits when prices fall.
How much can I lose buying an option?
As an option buyer, your maximum loss is the premium you paid — nothing more. If the option expires worthless, you lose 100% of the premium but never owe additional money.
Are Nifty options cash-settled?
Yes. In India, index options such as Nifty and Bank Nifty are cash-settled — the profit or loss is credited or debited in cash at expiry, with no delivery of shares.
Why would someone sell an option?
Sellers collect the premium and profit when the option expires worthless, which happens often. In exchange they take on obligation and larger risk, so they typically sell out-of-the-money options with a high probability of expiring worthless.
Do I need a lot of money to trade options?
Buying options needs relatively little capital — just the premium. Selling options requires margin, which is much larger. A single Nifty call might cost ₹10,000–₹20,000 to buy but need over a lakh in margin to sell.
What happens if I do nothing at expiry?
If your option is in-the-money it is auto-exercised and you receive the cash value; if it is out-of-the-money it expires worthless and you lose the premium. You do not need to place any order for cash-settled index options.
Is options trading gambling?
It can be if used recklessly, but options are risk-management tools. Used with defined risk, position sizing and a genuine edge, they are a professional instrument for speculation and hedging.
What is the underlying in an option?
The underlying is the asset the option derives its value from — for Nifty options it is the Nifty 50 index; for stock options it is the individual share.

Sources & references

Educational content only — not investment advice.

Educational content only — not investment advice. Examples use illustrative numbers. Options trading involves substantial risk. See our Risk Disclosure and SEBI Disclaimer.