Long term options introduced by NSE starting Mar 2008 allow one to take positions on the benchmark NIFTY 50 index over up to a three year period.
Brisk trading in select contracts. Lots of OI build up. Compared to earlier "innovations" in teh F&O space -- in CNX IT, Junior NIFTY, MINIFTY etc -- this one is clearly a hit.
Two things to notice about premiums: puts are a lot more expensive than calls and calls are often quoted at IV less than next and far month options of similar strike. So what's going on?
Clearly the call writers are writing covered calls and taking a position that NIFTY won't go below a certain level, rather than that the NIFTY will stay below the strike. The downside risk is low on the whole and it is probably quite easy to close out both positions should there be a deep correction and get away with a small loss. On the upside, the call premium goes to fund the margin now and can be taken out at expiry. But even this does not explain the low prices -- FD interest rates of 9.5% over the same period easily beats the strategy.
The real kicker is in the tax implications. The underlying that is purchased for margin, the NIFTY basket, is treated as equity investment , gains on which are tax free beyond a year. Naturally, the call writer expects to pay out the entire resulting gain to the call buyer at expiry. Now that is an income loss, offsettable against other income, and can be carried forward three years.
Here's an example scenario: I sell 1 European call contract at a strike of 5000 expiring in 25DEC2010. I receive a premium of 800 for this. NIFTY is currently at 4800, so I put in another 4000 and buy 1 NIFTY in cash and net this against the margin I need to keep for the open call. No tax implication in FY08-09. No tax implication in FY09-10 either. Now, on Dec 2010 NIFTY happens to be at 7000, say. I'm 2000 out of the money. So, I sell the 1 NIFTY that I hold, get 7000 for it, pocket 5000 and pay out 2000 to the call buyer. I book a loss of 1200 on the call.
I invested 4000. I receive 1000 at the end of 2.5 years. That's approximately 11% tax free return. But wait. That's not all. As far as the tax inspector is concerned, I made a long term capital gain of 1000 on equity which is tax free and a loss of 1200 which gives me a net 399 tax advantage. So its really as if I invested 4000 and got 1399 for it in 2.5 years. That's more than 15% post-tax return pa! The higher the NIFTY ends up, the more I stand to make (assuming I have enough other income to offset the tax loss against, of course).
And the tax free dividend (of around 2-3%) the NIFTY pays out over the 2.5 years. Now thats pure gravy!
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment