Files
ollama-model-training-5060ti/training_data/curated/text/85286bf59ba72c58cfe1334ecc9616a43b8328505ce2dc4617bb2a8e88d9f654.txt

40 lines
2.7 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Blame History

This file contains invisible Unicode characters
This file contains invisible Unicode characters that are indistinguishable to humans but may be processed differently by a computer. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.
Oapter 32: Structured Products 625
Another observation that can be made from the figure is that the PERCS pric­
ing curves level off at the redemption price. They cannot sell for more than that
price.
Now look on the left-hand side of the figure. Notice that the more time remain­
Ing until maturity, the higher the PERCS will trade above the common stock. This is
because of the extra dividends that the PER CS pay. Obviously, the PERCS with three
years until maturity has the potential to pay more dividends than the one with three
months remaining, so the three-year PERCS will sell for more than the six-month
PERCS when the common is below the issue price. Since either PERCS pays more
dividends than the common, they both trade for higher prices than the common.
When the common trades above the issue price (point 'T'), the opposite is true.
The six-month PERCS trades for a slightly higher price than the three-year PERCS,
but both sell for significantly less than the common, which has no limit on its poten­
tial price.
One other observation can be made regarding the situation in which the com­
mon trades well below the issue price: After the last additional dividend has been
paid by the PERCS, it will trade for approximately the same price as the common in
that situation. ·
Viewed strictly as a security, a PERCS may not appear all that attractive to some
investors. It has much, but not all, of the downside risk of the common stock, and not
nearly the upside potential. It does provide a better dividend, however, so if the com­
mon is relatively unchanged from the issue price when the PERCS matures, the
PERCS holder will have come out ahead. If this description of the PER CS does not
appeal to you, then neither should covered call writing, for it is the same strategy; a
call option premium is merely substituted for the higher dividend payout.
PERCS STRATEGIES
Since the PERCS is equivalent to a covered write, strategies that have covered writes
as part of their makeup are amenable to having PERCS as part of their makeup as
well. Covered writing is part of ratio writing. Other modifications to the covered writ­
ing strategy itself, such as the protected covered write, can also be applied to the
PERCS.
PROTECTING THE PERCS WITH LISTED OPTIONS
~
The safest way to protect the PERC S holding with listed options is to buy an out-of
the-nwney put. The resultant position - long PERCS and long put - is a protected
covered write, or a "collar." The long put prevents large losses on the downside, but
it costs the PERCS holder something. He won't make as much from his extra divi­
dend payout, because he is spending money for the listed put. Still, he may want the
downside comfort.