Welcome back to a new episode of Hedging with Jorge, your go-to series for breaking down complex hedging strategies into simple, actionable insights. In today’s episode, we introduce another key tool in the hedging toolbox, the call option.
We’ve already covered futures buying, futures selling and even buying puts. Now it’s time to focus on buying a call, a strategy often misunderstood but crucial in the right scenarios.
So, what is a call?
In simple terms, a call option is the right to buy an asset at a predetermined price, known as the strike price. This is not an obligation, just a right.
Imagine aluminium is currently priced at $2,600 per tonne. If you were to buy a futures contract, $2,600 becomes your hedge level simple and straightforward. But if you choose to buy a call option instead, you pay a premium, say $80, for the right to buy aluminium at that same $2,600 strike price.
Why pay a premium when you could just buy a future?
Here’s where it gets interesting. When you buy a call, you’re essentially buying insurance, like car insurance. You don’t want to crash your car, but you have insurance just in case. Similarly, you don’t want aluminium prices to rise dramatically, but if they do, the call protects you. If prices rise to $2,700, you exercise your option, avoiding the extra cost.
But what if prices fall?
Suppose the price dips to $2,520. In that case, you can simply abandon the call and buy a future at the new lower price. You’ve only lost the premium ($80), but you can now lock in a better price for your hedge. This approach allows you to benefit from falling markets, provided you had the right outlook when you made the initial decision.
Of course, this decision isn’t easy. Paying a premium means sacrificing potential profits. You should only choose this route if you strongly believe prices may drop below your break-even point (strike price minus premium).
And what about speculators?
For speculators who expect the market to rise, they too face a choice: buy a future (at no cost) or buy a call (at a cost). The difference? Risk control. Buying a call limits the downside to just the premium paid—nothing more.
This episode lays the groundwork. In the next episode, Jorge will walk through a numerical example to help solidify the concepts discussed today.
Until then, don’t forget—hedging is not about guessing the market. It’s about managing your exposure wisely.