The price at which the holder of a derivative contract exercises his right if it is economic to do so at the appropriate point in time as delineated in the financial product's contract.
The price of the underlying contract at which the buyer of an option has the right, but not the obligation, to purchase the underlying contract at any time before the expiration of the option. Normally, options are available at a number of different strike prices for the same underlying commodity with the same expiration date. ender The act on the part of the seller of futures contracts of giving notice to the clearinghouse that he intends to deliver the physical commodity in satisfaction of the futures contract. The clearinghouse, in turn, passes along the notice to the oldest buyer of record in that delivery month of the commodity. ( See also retender)
The agreed price at which an option may be exercised
The stated price per share for which the underlyin... Add a comment
The stated price per share for which an option holder can purchase (in the case of a call) or sell (in the case of a put) an underlying stock upon exercising the option contract. Also known as exercise price.
Price at which an option holder can exercise the option and purchase the underlying security or currency.
The price at which the futures contract underlying a call or put option can be purchased (if a call) or sold (if a put). Also referred to as exercise price.
The stated price of an option at which the owner can buy the underlying security in the case of a call option or sell in the case of a put option. Eg, a Jan 110 Citicorp option has a strike price of 110.
Also called exercise price. The price at which can exercise it - buy or sell the underlying instrument.
Also called the exercise price, the price at which an option executes on a future date.
The strike price is the set amount at which a buyer of a call can purchase the underlying or at which the buyer of a put can sell his contract. Every Option transaction must contain this specified price. Also called the "Exercise Price".
The price at which a holder of stock options is able to purchase the stock. Also called the exercise price.
The price that must be paid for a share of common stock when an option is exercised.
The price at which an option transaction will be undertaken if the purchaser exercises his right to transact.
(1) the fixed price of a put or call option (see definitions of those terms) (2) dollar value at which the holder of a share option can exercise it.
Fixed price at which the security underlying a call option will be purchased, or a put option will be sold, if the holder of the option chooses to exercise the option. The strike price is also known as the exercise price.
The price at which the buyer of an option contract may choose to exercise the option.
Exercise Price. The price at which the underlying contract is bought or sold upon exercise of an option.
The price the owner of an option can purchase or sell the underlying security. The purchases and sales are also known as calls and puts.
The price agreed at which the underlying instrument can be traded.
finance/foreign exchange) Price at which the option buyer obtains the right to purchase (call option) or sell (put option) a security or currency.
The agreed price at which the option can be exercised which will be equal to, higher or lower than the current price of the underlying.
also known as the exercise price, this is the fixed price at which stock can be bought when an option is exercised.
The price, agreed to by the parties, at which the underlying commodity or futures contract will move from seller to buyer.
the specified price at which an options contract may be exercised. If the buyer of the option exercises, the futures contract position(s) will be entered at the strike price.
Price of a financial instrument at which conversion or exercise occurs.
The strike price is the real dollar amount (in millions) that a movie is estimated to make opening weekend. If the box-office take falls short of the strike, the put option will cash out with a profit, and the call will cash out at zero. If the box-office take is higher than the strike price, then the call will profit and the put will cash out at zero.
The price at which an option is due to be exercised at some time in the future. When you buy an option you will pay (called the premium) for the privilege of being able to buy the stock upon which the option is based at a definite price at some time in the future. This price is the strike price or exercise price.
The price at which an option may be exercised for the underlying security
The fixed price for which a stock can be purchased in a call contract or sold in a put contract.
Also referred to as the exercise price. The strike price is the price in the option contract at which the holder of the option may buy or sell an underlying futures contract by exercising his option. Hence, a Dec 90 call has a 90 strike price. This call option contract grants the holder a right to buy the underlying futures contract at the price level of 0.9000 anytime during the life of the option contract.
The Strike Price is the price at which the holder of a stock option may purchase the stock. If the strike price is below the price at which the stock is trading on the open market, the option holder may be able to make a profit. If the stock price on the open market is below the strike price, the options are said to be "underwater". It would make no sense to exercise an "underwater" option because that would mean buying the stock through the stock option at a higher price than you would pay on the open market.
The stated price per share for which underlying stock may be purchased or sold by the option holder upon exercise of the option contract. Option prices can be traded with Finspreads
The price at which the underlying can be bought (calls) or sold (puts).
A specified price at which an investor can buy or sell an option's underlying financial instrument. The exchange rate, interest rate, or market price that is guaranteed by an option transaction.
the price at which the underlying futures contract is bought or an option is exercised. Also called an exercise price.
The price at which the underlying asset under a call or put option can be purchased (call) or sold (put).
In options trading, the strike price (also known as the exercise price) is the specified price for the investment instrument underlying a call or put. If the option is exercised, the underlying security is traded at the strike price.
The price at which an underlying asset must be bought (call) or sold (put), if an option is exercised.
The price per share at which the underlying asset of an option is bought or sold by the option holder
A fixed price at which a stock can be bought or sold when a call or put is exercised. (Also know as the "Exercise Price".)
The specified price at which an option contract may be exercised. If the buyer of the option exercises (demands performance), the futures contract positions will be entered at the strike price.
A term used with options. This is the ‘price’ of the underlying stock that an option is tied to. If an option is to be exercised, the strike price is the price at which the underlying security will be bought or sold at. For example, if you own a call option on a stock and the strike price is $100, you have the right to buy the stock before the options expiration at $100 even if the stock is trading at $110.
The stated price on a securities contract at which the underlying security may be bought or sold prior to or upon expiration.
All option contracts have a strike price which is one of the factors in how it is priced. £1.30 is the strike price of a Vodafone March £1.30 call or put
Also known as the exercise price, this is the price at which the holder can buy/sell the underlying currency.
The price at which the underlying stock of a call option can be purchased, or the price at which the underlying stock of a put option can be sold. Also referred to as the exercise price.
The price at which an option can be converted by exercise into the underlying futures contract.
The stated price per share at which the option holder can buy or sell the underlying security.
Also referred to as the option price, exercise price, or grant price; the price you pay per share when you exercise your options. The strike price is set by your company.
A price at which the stock or commodity underlying a call or put option can be purchased (call) or sold (put) over the specified period.
The pre-determined price of the underlying security which, depends on the type of ELI, determines whether the investors will receive the par value, the underlying security or a reduced amount of the par value upon expiry of the ELI.
Price where future or option contract operates
Share price a stock may be purchased (call) or sold (put) by option holder.
The price at which the option can be exercised and the underlying commodity exchanged. It is the price at which the futures position will be established if exercised.
The price at which an option may be exercised. That is, when the underlying stock reaches the strike price, an option holder may require the writer to perform the transaction as agreed upon in the original privilege.
The price at which an Option or Futures contract can be executed according to the terms of the contract.
The price which the buyer of an option decides to lock in. For instance, at $13.00 spot, WTI puts and calls can be written at strike prices at ...$14.00, $13.50, $13.00, $12.50, 12.00... options
For call options, the specified price at which the buyer has the right to purchase the underlying contract
The price at which the buyer of a call can purchase the stock during the life of the option or the price at which the buyer of a put can sell the stock during the life of the option. Subindex - see narrow-based index.
The price at which the underlying security can be bought or sold before the option expires.
It is the price at which the warrant-holder to buy (a call) or to sell (a put) the underlying asset. However, currently most of the warrants are cash settled.
The price at which the buyer of a call (put) option may choose to exercise his right to purchase (sell) the underlying futures contract. Also called Exercise Price.
a specific pre-designated price at which the futures are to be bought or sold or when the option is Exercised (opposite of Market Price.)
The price at which the investor may buy or sell the underlying during (if American style) or at the end (if European style) of the expiry period. Also referred to as 'expiry price' and 'exercise price'. It is known when the warrant is issued.
The price at which the owner of an option can purchase (call) or sell (put) the ...
The specified price in an options contract at which the underlying instrument will be bought or sold if the option is exercised.
The price at which Put options and Call options can be exercised (i.e. to sell for a put or to buy for a call). The options are 'in the money' or 'out the money' depending on whether the difference between the strike price and the spot price on the markets is positive or negative. The strike price is sometimes called the exercise price. Français: Prix d'exercice Español: Precio de ejercicio
The price at which an option owner can buy or sell the underlying asset.
The fixed price at which the holder of an option in entitled to buy or sell.
A term used in options trading. The price at which an option can be purchased or sold over a specified period of time. Also known as the Exercise Price.
Another term for exercise price, it is the dollar price per share that an underlying stock can be bought (call) or sold (put).
The price at which the owner of the option may buy or sell the underlying security. Similarly, it is the price at which the seller of the option must buy or sell the underlying security and is also known as the Exercise Price.
An option's exercise price
The price at which an option can be exercised. For example, the owner of a call ABC April 40 can call in (buy) 100 shares of ABC at 40; the strike price is 40.
The price at which the owner of a warrant can purchase (call) or sell (put) the underlying. Used interchangeably with exercise price.
The price at which a derivative gives the right (or obligation) to buy or sell the underlying security. Also called the exercise price.... more on Strike price
The strike, or exercise, price of an option is the specified share price at which the shares of stock can be bought or sold by the buyer if he exercises the right to buy (in the case of a call) or sell (in the case of a put). A strike price is the actual numeric value of the option. For example, a May option may have strike prices of 45, 50 and 55. Strike prices are determined when the underlying reaches a certain numeric value and trades consistently at or above that value. If, for example, XYZ stock was trading at 49, hit a price of 50 and traded consistently at this level, the next highest strike may be added. See Call Option.
The price in an option contract at which the option can be initiated i.e. the price at which the option's underlying security/commodity can be bought or sold.
Price at which the purchaser of an option has the right to buy (call option) or sell (put option) the underlying currency.
The stated price per share for which the underlying security may be purchased (in the case of a call) or sold (in the case of a put) by the option holder upon exercise of the option contract.
The specified price at which a call option buyer can buy the underlying security or a put option buyer can sell the underlying security .
The price, specified in the option contract, at which the underlying futures contract, security, or commodity will move from seller to buyer.
The stated price per share for which a stock option may be purchased or sold by the option holder.
One of the contractual specifications of an options contract.
Also called exercise price. The price at which an options holder can buy or sell the underlying instrument.
The price at which parties to a bilateral contract have agreed to trade and settle their transactions. In options trading, strike prices are listed incrementally above and below the actual price of the contract. Options are offered for sale at these strike prices. New strike prices are added in either direction as prices move. Also known as Exercise Price.
The strike price, or exercise price, is a key variable in a derivatives contract between two parties. Where the contract requires delivery of the underlying instrument, the trade will be at the strike price, regardless of the spot price (market price) of the underlying at that time.