WorldWide Markets with Simon Brown

Understanding warrants (#401)


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Understanding warrants

TOPSBZ is a put warrant that trades on the #JSE and can be bought in any normal stock broker account .. @SBGTraderZA clients buying in a warrant account pay flat R50 brokerage taxes etc. https://t.co/LX0mZmplYo

— Simon Brown (@SimonPB) May 23, 2020

 

Warrants were the first derivative I traded, starting in October 1997 as they were launched in South Africa. SAWarrants was also my first successful website that launched me into the financial services industry. Recently I've been trading some warrants again as have a few traders I know and a tweetstorm I did over the weekend got a lot of question about trading warrants.

The short answer is don't.

They're derivatives and hence risky If you're an ETF buyer or even just a straight equity buy and holder, stay away. If you're successfully trading other derivatives then they're worth a look. Certainly, they have some benefits over traditional derivatives, but also lots of complexity.

A warrant is really an option that gives the holder the right to buy or sell an underlying asset.

  • Call goes up as does the underlying asset.
    • Last letter of the warrant code will be A-0.
  • Put goes up as the underlying asset falls.
    • Last letter of the warrant code will be P-Z.

The fact that it is a right, not an obligation, means your loss is capped at what you paid.

Warrants trade on the JSE just like any other share or ETF with six-letter codes. First 3 letters denote the underlying asset. 4th letter is the issuer, 5th letter the style (B for normal, I for instalment and K for knockout - be very careful of knockout warrants). The last letter is as above denoting call or put.

But a lot of greeks that can trip you up that are outputted by the Black-Scholes formula (this formula won the writers a Nobel prize).

  • Gearing ~ amplification of the move. For example, 4x gearing means for every 1% move of the underlying your warrant will move 4%. You don't want to gear much more than 5x, 8x on indices.
  • Theta ~ time decay. A warrant decays every day, every week, even if the asset moves in your direction it will lose some value. This reduces the warrant price and is very aggressive in the last third of the warrants life. Be very careful of tie decay.
  • Expiry ~ unlike CFDs, warrants expire and if you hold at expiry you'll be paid out. If it has value.
    • Make sure you have lots of time, at least 3 months, ideally 6 months. Time decay becomes very aggressive in the last few months.
    • Value is price above strike prce at expiry (for calls). For puts price below strike.
  • Strike is the price at which you can buy / sell the asset.
    • You want the current price to ideally be 10% - 15% of the strike price.
  • Delta ~ many things but more or less the likelihood the warrant will expire with value.

One major benefit is that with warrants you can only lose hat you paid, unlike with CFDs or futures you can lose more than you deposited.

The warrant issuers will also ensure there is a market maker buying and selling at fair value at all times. They will use a pricing matrix that can be found online.

If you trade warrants within a Standard Online Share Trading warrant account you pay flat brokerage of R50 +taxes.

And Standard Bank have a good website at warrants.co.za

And I will end where I started. Be very careful and do not jump into warrants unless you're a successful trader already, otherwise, the greeks will get you. The big challenge is that you may get the direction of the trade right (call or put) but pick the wrong warrant and lose money.

JSE – The JSE is a registered trademark of the JSE Limited.

JSE Direct is an independent broadcast and is not endorsed or affiliated with, nor has it been authorised, or otherwise approved by JSE Limited. The views expressed in this programme are solely those of the presenter, and do not necessarily reflect the views of JSE Limited.

 

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