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ollama-model-training-5060ti/training_data/curated/text/df560c2c3fa7e6260d1bc398ea733fdc9fc7726e61f0e2364d6ce0423b067657.txt

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146 •   TheIntelligentOptionInvestor
Last
This is the last price at which the associated contract traded. Notice that
the last price associated with the far in-the-money (ITM) strikes ($20, $21,
$22) and one of the far out-of-the-money (OTM) strikes ($37) have the
letter “C” in front of them. This is just my brokers way of showing that the
contract did not trade during that days trading session and that the last
price listed was the closing price of the previous day. Closing prices are not
necessarily market prices. At the end of the day, if a contract has not traded,
the exchange will give an indicative closing price (or settlement price ) for
that day. The Oracle options expiring on August 16, 2013, and struck at
$20 may not have traded for six months or more, with the exchange simply
“marking” a closing price every day.
One important fact to understand about option prices is that they
are quoted in per-share terms but must be transacted in contracts that rep-
resent control of multiple shares. The number of shares controlled by one
contract is called the contract size . In the U.S. market, one standard con-
tract represents control over 100 shares. Sometimes the number of shares
controlled by a single contract differs (in the case of a company that was
acquired through the exchange of shares), but these are not usually avail-
able to be traded. In general, one is safe remembering that the contract size
is 100 shares.
Y ou cannot break a contract into smaller pieces or buy just part of a
contract—transacting in options means you must do so with indivisible
contracts, with each contract controlling 100 shares. Period. As such, every
price you see on the preceding screenshot, if you were to transact in one of
those options, would cost you 100 times the amount shown. For example,
the last price for the $31-strike option was $1.65. The investor who bought
that contract paid $165 for it (plus fees, taxes, and commissions, which are
not included in the posted price). In the rest of this book, when I make
calculations regarding money spent on a certain transaction, you will al-
ways see me multiply by 100.
Change
This is the change from the previous days closing price. My broker shows
change only for contracts that were actively traded that day. It looks like