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if you have shares that you hedge with a put, then you have to buy a put. So as for the put, you are the buyer (you buy the option / the right to sell your shares at the strike price). If the put ends up being in the money, you sell your shares.derswap07 wrote:
myriam,
for your 2nd comment- aren’t you the seller? if you sell, you will have a taxable event??!!!
Ok, the first part is fine. This was clear to me.Galli wrote:
I’m not goign to look at the 2014 exam answers yet to figure out what’s going in this question but i’ll provide a brief comment.
Buying a put does not exactly monetize the asset but does provide protection from downside risk which can be viewed as ‘locking in gains’. This might be guaranteeing the equitable gain without actually creating a taxable event through an all outright sale. Yes, the put option going into the money will create a taxable event but by no means does the investor have to exercise the put option. He/she could roll it into a future month.
If you’re speaking in generalities and not towards the specifics of the Mock Exam question:myriam2222 wrote:
I don’t think you need to open it. It’s just a general question about how far you can delay the liquidation of your concentrated position with a put.
If the put gets in the money:
1) can you buy shares on the market to sell them at the strike price, and keep your concentrated position untouched with unrealized gains untaxed?
or
2) do you have to realize the capital gains outstanding in your concentrated position?
That’s what Derswap07 and I are trying to figure out.