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IG On Arbitrum
  • Smilee On Arbitrum
  • Past & Present
    • Smilee v0
    • Smilee v1
    • Smilee v1.69 (current)
  • IMPERMANENT GAIN
    • What are Options?
    • Impermanent Loss & Options
    • Understanding Delta Hedging
    • 📈Trade
      • User Guide
      • Bull, Bear, Smile
      • Initial Price, Breakeven, Expiry
      • Impermanent Gain Pricing
      • Impermanent Gain vs. Vanilla Options
    • 💰Earn
      • User Guide
      • Payoff, APY & Performance
      • Volatility vs Volume
  • Protocol Design
    • Overview
    • DVPs
    • Vaults
    • Liquidity-to-Volatility Engine
    • Synthetic AMM
    • Delta Hedging
    • Maturities & Epochs
    • Fees
    • Oracles & Risks
    • Decentralization Roadmap
  • RESOURCES
    • Smilee FAQs
    • Smart Contracts
    • Media Kit
    • Audits
    • Bug Bounties
  • Developer Documentation
    • Introduction
    • How to Execute a Trade
    • Retrieving DVP Data
    • Read Value of an IG Position
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  1. IMPERMANENT GAIN

What are Options?

(Optional) Basic Options Explained

PreviousSmilee v1.69 (current)NextImpermanent Loss & Options

Last updated 1 year ago

Options give traders unique ways to leverage, speculate, or hedge risk on an underlying asset. They come in a wide variety and can be structured in near-infinite ways to create a desired payout.

A basic options contract offers the buyer the opportunity to buy or sell (depending on the type of contract they hold) the underlying asset by a certain date at a certain price.

Key characteristics of an option include:

  • Underlying Asset: The financial asset that the option applies to, such as ETH, BTC, you name it.

  • Strike Price: The price at which the holder of the option can buy (for a call option) or sell (for a put option) the underlying asset.

  • Expiration Date: The date when the final value of the option is determined.

NOTE: On Smilee, a trader can buy/sell options anytime they’d like before the expiration date thanks to the Smilee AMM.

  • Premium: This is the price the buyer of the option pays to the seller of the option to enjoy the right that the option provides.

Example:

Let’s say Chad buys a Call option (paying the premium) that gives him the right to buy ETH at $2,000 (strike price) by the end of the week (expiration date).

  • At the end of the week, If the ETH price is greater than $2,000, he wins! Chad can buy ETH at $2,000 and sell it at a higher price.

  • However, if the ETH price is less than $2,000, it does not make sense to use his right to buy ETH at $2,000 so he simply loses the premium paid.

Graphically, his payoff (aka how much Chad earns or loses for different prices of ETH) is:

Two important things to notice:

  • Chad never loses more than the premium (he cannot get liquidated!).

  • Chad can make big money for a relatively smol premium (he enjoys huge leverage!).

Many people use options to simply gain leveraged exposure on an underlying asset, but options are also widely used as a tool to build complex position structures by giga brains.

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