Not exact matches
Investors receive premiums for selling others the option to buy a stock
at a
specific price.
Investors can set their own bid or ask
prices, too, by placing orders to sell or buy only
at a
specific price.
Limit orders allow
investors and traders to buy or sell
at a
specific price or better.
A call option provides an
investor with the right, but not the obligation to purchase a stock
at a
specific price.
An option is a contract that gives an
investor the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell a stock
at a
specific price on or before a
specific date, or expiration date.
Investors can set their own bid or ask
prices, too, by placing orders to sell or buy only
at a
specific price.
A call option is an agreement that gives an
investor the right, but not the obligation, to buy a stock, bond, commodity or other instrument
at a specified
price within a
specific time period.
A call is when an
investor buys the «right» to buy a stock
at a
specific price.
Conversely, a put option gives an
investor the right, but not the obligation, to sell an underlying security
at a specified
price (strike) within a
specific time period, therefore a buyer of a put may exercise the put and benefit when the underlying security goes below the option strike.
Both forward and futures contracts allow
investors to buy or sell an asset
at a
specific time and
price.
Most exchanges allow simplistic bid and ask
price information with no market depth statistics, providing no understanding about volume available
at a
specific price, while this is valuable information for high net
investors.