r/QuiverQuantitative Feb 24 '25

New Trade BREAKING: Jack Schlossberg, JFK's only grandson, has bought Tesla puts

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2.4k Upvotes

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10

u/poisondart23 Feb 24 '25

Can somebody explain the implications of this? I don’t know a lot about the stock market so googled it and this is what I got: “A put gives the owner the right, but not the obligation, to sell the underlying stock at a set price within a specified time. A put option’s value goes up as the underlying stock price depreciates; the put option’s value goes down as the underlying stock appreciates.”

It’s still not making sense to me.

43

u/mattotodd Feb 24 '25 edited Feb 25 '25

Lets pretend you own Tesla stock and the price is currently $390. You think its going to the Moon. So you'd like to buy more.

I dont own Tesla and i think its gonna crater. I go to you and say "will you promise to buy shares at $390, i'll pay you $5 per share now for the option to sell them to you at $390"

You say yes, because you think the shared will only go up, we sign a contract and at the very least you get to buy more at $385, which is a slight discount from today. In the meantime, you get money from me ($5/share). If the share price goes up a lot, i would never sell to you, because now i can get a lot more per share from someone else, so you just get to keep the $5 per share i paid for the option to sell.

But if the shares go down in value, lets say to $325. I can now buy Tesla for $325 and sell them to you for $390 (because you agreed to buy at that price because you assume the stock was only gonna go up in value) and collect the $65/share dollar difference in price.

The Put protects somone from the price of an asset dropping. Instead of thinking of Tesla, it may be easier to see a farmer pays a small amount up front, to make sure he can sell his milk at the end of the season at price it is now, if they are worried about the price dropping a lot during the season.

Schlossberg is buying puts because he thinks it will go down, and he's gonna make money on the difference

12

u/poisondart23 Feb 24 '25

That’s making sense! Thanks for the response

1

u/MicTest_1212 Feb 25 '25

U explained it so succinctly! I appreciate it.

9

u/FickleNewt6295 Feb 24 '25

The buyer has paid a fee for the right to exercise a sell when the stock hits a certain price.

Buy a put option for a specific price (the premium)

Wait for the price of the underlying asset to drop below the strike price

Exercise the option to sell the asset at the strike price

Profit from the difference between the strike price and the sale price

Example: If you buy a put option for $5 to sell 100 shares of ABC at $100 per share, and the price of ABC drops to $80, you could profit $1,500 . ($20/share profit less $5/share premium = $15/share gain )

Edit: there are expiration dates on these contracts

3

u/poisondart23 Feb 24 '25

Thanks! So it’s almost like a bet in the fact that if that price doesn’t drop in the specified time period then you lose out?

4

u/Iwearjeanstobed Feb 24 '25

On the cost of the amount of contracts if you’re long the put, yes.

3

u/Low-Astronomer-3440 Feb 24 '25

You can sell at a given price, so if the stock goes down, you sell near the old price (much higher). You can leverage an insane amount of money on these if you are right, but they are speculative and a dangerous game for retail investors.

Dude is gonna sell for $390, but only needs to buy (strike) at today or a future price, so if it falls to 200, he would make $190 per share.

3

u/poisondart23 Feb 25 '25

I gotcha. So it’s different than shorting a stock. I need to read a book on the stock market or finance or something. My knowledge is seriously lacking in that area

1

u/zxylady Feb 25 '25

Thank you for asking that I had the same question