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At-the-Money

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At-the-Money Option
An option is called at-the-money when the underlying investment sells for the same price as the strike price.
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At-The-Money
(ATM): When the strike price of an option is the same as the current price of the underlying instrument.
An option is at-the-money if the strike price of the option is equal to the market price of the underlying security.

at-the-money investment & finance definition
Of or relating to a call or a put option that has a strike price equal to the price of the underlying asset.
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At-the-money option
Abbreviated ATM option. An option whose present currency price is approximately equal to the strike price.
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At-the-Money Option
It is a term used to describe a stock option or a warrant, whose strike price is nearly equal to the prevailing market price of the underlying stock.
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Term: At-the-money
Definition:
An option whose strike price is nearest the current price of the underlying deliverable.

At-the-money
Definition:
An option is at the Money if the strike price of the option is equal to The Market price of the Underlying security. For example, if xyz Stock is Trading at 54, then the xyz 54 option is at the money. ...

At-the-Money
An option whose strike/exercise price is equal to or near the current market price of the underlying instrument.
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An option is at-the-money when the futures price equals the option's strike price. A December CME E-mini S&P 500 call option with a strike price of 1100 is at-the-money if the December CME E-mini S&P 500 futures contract is trading at 1100.00.

At-the-money
An option is at-the-money if the strike price of the option is equal to the market price of the underlying security.

At-the-Money (ATM)

An option that has the same strike price as the underlying asset. Often used to refer to the option with the strike price closest to the current price of the underlying asset.
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At-the-Money
When an option‘s strike price is the same as the current trading price of the underlying commodity or security, the option is at-the-money.
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At-the-money: Option whose exercise price is the same as the market price of the underlying asset.
Bear: Someone who thinks market prices will decline.
Bid: The price that the market participants are willing to pay.

At-the-money: An option with an exercise price that is equal to the current market price of the underlying stock.
Autocorrelation: The correlation between the values of a time series and previous values of the same series.

At-the-money (ATM) option. Option whose present currency price is approximately equal to the strike price.
At the price stop-loss order. A stop-loss order that must be executed at the precise requested level, regardless of market conditions.

At-the-Money - If an option is at-the-money, the option's strike price is the same as the underlying price. For example, if March crude oil futures are trading at $71, the March crude oil 71 puts and March crude oil 71 calls are both at-the-money.

At-the-money - an option those strike price matches the underlying current price
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At-the-money
The exercise price of a derivative that is closest to the market price of the underlying instrument.
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At-the-Money: An option that has a strike price the same or very close to the market value of the underlying security. See also Intrinsic Value.

At-the-Money (covered warrant)
A covered warrant is At-the-Money when the strike price is the same, or very close to, the price of the underlying. It applies to both Calls and Put warrants.
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At-the-Money Option - An option with a strike price that is equal, or approximately equal, to the current market price of the underlying futures contract.

AT-THE-MONEY OPTION An option with a strike price equal that of the current price.
AVERAGING A trading term based on average prices over a predetermined period ie selling or buying on the average morning or afternoon fix in London.

At-the-Money
When the price of the underlying equity, index or commodity equals the strike price of the option.

At-the-Money - Refers to options in which the underlying stock is trading at the same price as the option strike price.
Auction - The issuance of new Treasury bills, notes, and bonds at stated intervals by the Federal Reserve.

At-the-money: An option contract with a strike price that equals the market price of the underlying stock.
Basis points: 0.01% in yield. Increasing from 5.00% to 5.05%, the yield increases by five basis points.

At-the-money option: A term that describes an option with a strike price that is equal to the current market price of the underlying stock.

At-the-Money Variations
In the real trading world, it would be somewhat rare that an option's strike price would be exactly equal to the current market price of the underlying security or asset.

At-the-Money
An option which has a strike price that is nearest to the underlying futures price.
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At-the-money - An option with a strike price equal to the underlying futures price.
At-the-Money Spot - An option whose strike price is equal to the current, prevailing price in the underlying cash spot market.

At-the-Money
An option whose strike price is nearest the current price of the underlying deliverable
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Attenuation
The fractional part of reduced energy or lost power due to smoothing or filtering.

At-the-Money Option: An option with an exercise or strike price that is equal, or almost equal, to the current market price of the underlying security. ATM options have a delta of +50 or -50.

At-The-Money Refers to a call or put option when the strike price (price that can be paid for the underlying security) is equal to the value of the asset on which the option is written.

At-the-money
An option with a strike price equal to the current price of the instrument, such as a stock, upon which the option was granted.
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At-the-money
This term refers to the situation where the exercise price of an option or warrant is close to the current spot price of the underlying asset. The intrinsic value of this option or warrant is therefore almost zero.

At-the-Money (ATM) forward strike
The ATM forward strike price of an Option is the strike price of the corresponding forward outright price at a specific forward date, as calculated via interest rate differentials.
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At-The-Money is an option that has a strike price, which is nearest to the underlying futures price.
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At-the-money option
Option whose exercise or strike price is identical to the market price.
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At-the-money is another way of saying "at the current price". Options whose exercise price is the same or almost the same as the current market price of the underlying stock or futures contract are considered At-the-money.
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At-the-money
In options, when the strike price equals the price of the underlying contract
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With the at-the-money put, if the stock rises $10 by the July expiration, to $65, the investor will have participated in all of the $1,000 gain in a 100-share stock position, but will be out the $460 paid to purchase the put.

An ATM, or at-the-money option, is one where the strike price is roughly the same as the current underlying price.

Buy an ATM (At-The-Money) Put
Buy an ATM Call
This strategy is more expensive than simply buying puts or calls, but you are in effect buying insurance against a large move in either direction.

An option is at-the-money if the strike price of the option is equal to the market price of the underlying security. For example, if XYZ stock is trading at 36, then the AYZ 36 option is at-the-money.
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- le opzioni at-the-money sono, generalmente, le più scambiate, e quindi la volatilità implicita collegata ha contenuto informativo più attendibile, ...

An option is at-the-money if the strike price, i.e., the price the option holder must pay to exercise the option, is the same as the current price of the underlying security on which the option is written.

At-The-Money: At-The-Money, abbreviated ATM, is when the price of the underlying is at the strike price of the option. For example, an XYZ 35 call would be ATM when XYZ underlying was at $35 a share.

By selecting an at-the-money option to sell as part of a vertical spread, an investor can execute a time decay play with a hedged position.

ATM At-the-money (q.v.). At-the-money Having a strike price that equals the spot price. At-the-money forward Having a strike price that equals the forward price.

At-the-money: An option whose strike price is equal to the market value of the underlying futures contract. Can also refer to an order to buy a futures contract at the current bid-ask price (see Market order).

See also Delivery and Exercise At-The-Money A term that describes an option with a strike price that is equal to the current market price of the underlying stock.

At-the-money An option is said to be at-the-money when the strike price is the same as the current market price of the stock or underlying instrument. For example, a 75 call and a 75 put would both be at-the-money with the stock trading at $75.

Thus, by definition, an at-the-money or out-of-the-money option has no intrinsic value; the time value is the total option premium. This does not mean, however, these options can be obtained at no cost.

The put backspread is a strategy in options trading whereby the options trader writes a number of put options at a higher strike price (often at-the-money) and buys a greater number (often twice as many) of put options at a lower strike price ...

When buying a straddle, the put and the call that are purchased are either at-the-money or close to it. After identifying a triangle trading pattern with a tightening trading range, a position is initiated near the tip of the triangle.

Equities tend to have skewed curves: compared to at-the-money, implied volatility is substantially higher for low strikes, and slightly lower for high strikes.

The result forms a composite hypothetical option that is at-the-money and has 30 days to expiration.

With Disney trading above 33 and the sale of the (at-the-money or near-the-money) November ATM 33 puts for a credit of 1.10, this would give the seller an obligation to buy the stock at 33 if it is below this at expiry.

Looking at an example, the at-the-money September 25 calls for Microsoft, it currently shows there are 17,200 contracts open. You may be wondering how many of those were bought and how many were sold by various option traders.

They are hypothetical options that are at-the-money and have 30 days until expiration. They attempt to represent the implied volatility of their respective option.

Imagine you purchased a July Crude $22 at-the-money put for a premium of $600, less fees and commissions. The option you now own represents the right to sell 1,000 barrels of July crude, at $22/barrel, regardless of where the futures price settles.

See also: Option, Market, Stock, Trading, Strike Price