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Recently, a friend asked me about the two most confusing concepts in options trading—buy to open vs sell to open. I think it’s necessary to have a good discussion about this topic.
Let’s start with the most straightforward difference. Sell to open means you directly sell an options contract to open a position, and your account immediately credits you with a sum of money (the option premium). At this point, you are short, betting that the option will depreciate. Conversely, buy to open means you buy an options contract to open a position; you are long, hoping the option will appreciate. These two strategies have completely opposite profit directions.
I’ve seen many beginners get these mixed up at first. A simple way to understand it is: sell to open = sell to make money → buy to close to buy back and close the position; buy to open = buy to hold → sell to close to sell and close the position. The former involves receiving money first, the latter involves spending money first.
Now, let’s go a bit deeper. When you sell to open, for example, selling a $1 options contract, you directly receive $100 (since options contracts are based on 100 shares). But this isn’t pure profit—you are shorting the option and need to bear the risk of it increasing in value. If the option price rises to $3, you’ll either buy it back to close the position (incurring a $200 loss) or get exercised.
On the other hand, buy to open is the traditional long approach. You spend money to buy the option and wait for it to appreciate. If the stock price moves favorably, both the time value and intrinsic value of the option will increase, allowing you to profit. But the downside is that time decay will continuously eat into your gains, especially as expiration approaches.
Here’s a key concept worth emphasizing—time value. The further away the expiration date, the higher the time value; as the expiration date nears, the time value rapidly decays. This impacts the two strategies differently. Someone selling to open is essentially earning from the decay of time value, waiting for the option to become worthless. Someone buying to open is racing against time, needing the stock to move quickly in their favor.
In practice, sell to open is often used for covered calls (if you already hold 100 shares of the stock). For example, if you own 100 shares of AT&T, you can sell a call option on AT&T, collecting the premium. If the stock doesn’t rise, the option expires worthless, and you keep the premium. If the stock surges and gets exercised, you sell your shares at the strike price—missing some upside but already compensated by the premium. This is a relatively conservative income strategy.
But if you do a naked short (selling options without holding the underlying stock), the risk is much higher. If the option gets exercised, you’ll need to buy the stock at the market and sell it at the strike price, which could lead to unlimited losses. That’s why brokers impose strict limits on naked short options.
Ultimately, choosing between buy to open and sell to open depends on your market outlook and risk tolerance. Expect a stock to rise? Use buy to open to leverage small capital for big gains. Expect a stock to fall or stay flat? Use sell to open to collect premiums and profit from time decay. But remember, options are much riskier than stocks—leverage amplifies both gains and losses. Beginners should practice with simulation accounts first, understanding how factors like time decay and implied volatility affect options prices before trading with real money.