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How to Buy Home Depot For No Money Down
By Jeff Clark
December 5, 2006

It’s the options market’s dirty little secret…

Most people lose money trading options. They use options to speculate… to take on more risk than they can handle.

But there’s a simple options strategy I’ll tell you about today that gives you the leverage of options… and involves no more risk than owning your average stock. Here’s how it works:

Use options as a substitute for owning the underlying stock.

For example, let’s say you want to take a position in Home Depot (HD), which closed Monday at $39.20 per share. You could pony up $3,920 and buy 100 shares of the stock… or you could stroll on over to the options market and establish the same position for no money down.

Let me explain…

One Home Depot January 40 call option (HDAH) – which gives the option holder the right to buy 100 shares of Home Depot at $40 by January 19 – trades for $110.

One Home Depot January 40 put option (HDMH) – which obligates the option seller to buy 100 shares of Home Depot at $40 by January 19 - trades for $170.

Now, if you buy the January 40 call option and also sell the January 40 put option, then you have both the right and the obligation to buy the stock at $40. Put another way, no matter what happens to Home Depot between now and January 19, you’re buying the stock at $40.

At first glance, this seems like a raw deal, since the stock is trading at $39.20. Keep in mind, though, that you paid $110 for the call but you received $170 for selling the put. So you pocketed $60 on the option position. When you take that into account, you’re actually buying the shares at $39.40.

Here’s how it all breaks down…

Option Position  
Buy the HD Jan. 40 call option = -$110
Sell the HD Jan. 40 put option = +$170
Net Credit +$60
Buy HD at 40 on Jan. 19 -$4,000
Net cost of the stock -$3,940
   
Stock Position  
Buy 100 shares of HD = -$3,920

The option position will behave exactly like the stock position. If Home Depot goes up $5, you’ll make $500 on the stock and you’ll make $500 on the option position. If HD drops $5, then both the stock and option positions lose $500.

The biggest difference, of course, is that instead of putting up $3,920 right away to buy the stock, you can control the same position with options and receive a $60 net credit.

And the $3,920 that would have otherwise been spent on the stock can sit in your money market fund and earn interest until you have to buy the stock on January 19.

And that’s how you buy Home Depot with no money down.

Be sure to check with your broker and comply with whatever rules and margin requirements the firm places on option accounts. It’s worth the trouble.

Once you get the hang of “no money down” stock ownership, you’ll join the select few who use options to make money instead of losing it.

Best regards and good trading,

Jeff Clark

Goldman Sachs Predicts A Further China Boom
“China's economic boom will probably continue for at least another two years, making it the longest and least volatile expansion since free-market reforms began in 1978, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said.

The world's fourth-largest economy may grow 9.8 percent next year and 10 percent in 2008, Goldman economist Liang Hong said today in a note to clients. The expansion will cause only 'limited' pressure on inflation to quicken, she said.” Read on…

Pfizer Gets a Multi-Billion Dollar Haircut
“Shares of Pfizer Inc. fell 15.6 percent in opening trade on Monday, wiping out nearly $30 billion of market value, after the world's biggest drugmaker scrapped development of its most important experimental medicine.

Pfizer halted work on torcetrapib, which was designed to raise levels of "good" HDL cholesterol, because of increased deaths and heart problems among patients given the product in a late-stage trial.” Read on…


Food and agriculture businesses booming… Syngenta, Agrium, Terra Industries, and Bunge all at new highs.

Dividends are in style… iShares Dow Jones Dividend Index ETF hits a new high. Major holdings include Altria, Kinder Morgan, Merck, and Bank of America.

Big Oil plays the same old song… new highs for ExxonMobil and Chevron.

In The News: Goldman says the China boom is far from over.
Last Change 52-Wk
S&P 500 1409.12 0.89% 11.39%
Oil (USO)* 54.20 -1.54% -20.11%
Gold (GLD)* 64.12 0.00% 27.42%
Silver (SLV)* 140.85 0.91% 1.98%
US Dollar 82.50 0.04% -10.26%
Euro 1.332 -0.10% 13.70%
VIX 11.23 -3.69% 2.00%
^HUI 360.22 1.79% 45.23%
10-year yield 4.43% 0.01 -0.09
* Since ETF inception

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Company Sym Industry

Raytheon

RTN

aerospace

Constellation Energy

CEG

energy

Euro Currency Trust

FXE

ETF

Chevron

CVX

Big Oil

Gulfmark Offshore

GMRK

oil service

Lamar

LAMR

billboards

Allegheny Tech

ATI

metals

Euro Disney

CEDC

entertainment

Mellon Financial

MEL

bank

Atlas Pipeline

APL

oil & gas pipelines

Vail Resorts

MTN

resorts

Nortel

NTL

Argentine telecom

American Real Estate

ACP

holding co

Chaparral Steel

CHAP

steel

Agrium

AGU

agriculture

Energen

EGN

utilities

Huaneng Power

HNP

utilities

Syngenta

SYT

agriculture

Avery Dennison

AVY

consumer prod

Taubman Centers

TCO

retail REIT

MGM Mirage

MGM

casinos

Oneok

OKE

utilities

Terra

TRA

ag chemicals

ExxonMobil

XOM

Big Oil

Psychiatric Solutions

PSYS

healthcare

Redwood Trust

RWT

REIT

Bunge

BG

agriculture

iShares S&P Telecom

IXP

telecom ETF

iShares Real Estate

IYR

real estate ETF

Xcel Energy

XEL

utilities

T2 Interactive

TTWO

video games

Nucor

NUE

steel

Foster Wheeler

FWLT

construction

Vanguard Utilities

VPU

ETF

Dean Foods

DF

food products

Realty Income

O

retail REIT

Orient-Express Hotels

OEH

hotels

Sirna

RNAI

biotech

iShares DJ Dividend

DVY

ETF

iShares Australia

EWA

Australian stocks

iShares Austria

EWO

Austrian stocks

iShares Singapore

EWS

Singapore stocks

iShares Malaysia

EWM

Malaysian stocks

iShares Canada

EWC

Canadian stocks

Duke Energy

DUK

utilities

Company Sym Industry

BUCA

BUCA

restaurants

IMAX

IMAX

theater equip

Saifun Semi

SFUN

semiconductors

Basin Water

BWTR

water utilities

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