Definition
The investor holds the stock and buys a put option, paying a premium for the right to sell the stock at the strike price before expiry. If the stock falls below the strike, the put can be exercised (or sold) to limit the loss to (purchase price - strike price) + premium paid. If the stock rises, the put expires worthless and the investor's gain is reduced by the premium cost. The protective put is conceptually identical to buying insurance: the premium is the cost of the protection; the strike is the deductible floor. It is appropriate for investors who want to maintain their upside exposure to a stock but are unwilling or unable to absorb a large loss (for example, approaching retirement or holding a concentrated position from an employer stock plan). For CIRE: the maximum loss = (stock purchase price - strike price) + premium paid; the break-even at expiry = stock purchase price + premium paid.
Source
Montreal Exchange options education; CIRO IDPC options suitability requirements
Where this shows up on the CIRE
- Outcome 5.3