The history of market making and Optiver

Market Making

This video below shares Optiver’s perspective on the purpose and impact of market making. Inspired by the origins of trading in 17th-century Amsterdam, it explains how market makers help create transparent and liquid financial markets by continuously providing buy and sell prices. By making it easier for investors to trade and for companies and governments to raise capital, Optiver plays a role in supporting efficient markets and contributing to economic growth. Since 1986, improving the market has remained at the core of Optiver’s mission.

The history of market making and Optiver

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Besides buying or selling single options, there are many other possible strategies that involve positions in multiple options simultaneously, as well as combining options with positions in the underlying assets.

The Options Basics Explainer introduced the concepts of call and put options, strike price, expiry, and long or short positions in an option contract. This page looks in more detail at option pricing.

ETFs

Options

What is an ETF? An ETF – or exchange traded fund – is a fund formed by a basket of underlying instruments that can be traded on the exchange. ETFs are often (but not always) tracking an index and following the index methodology, providing investors a low-cost and efficient way to invest in an index without having to buy all the underlying constituents.

Options

Options

What are options? An option is a type of derivative contract that gives the holder the right to buy or sell the underlying asset at a predetermined price – the exercise or strike price – at or before a certain date. Options exist on a wide variety of underlying assets, like single stocks, indices, ETFs, bonds, currencies, commodities. These contracts can serve as tools to protect a portfolio against potential losses or to express an opinion about the direction of the market.

What do long/short positions in put options mean? In the simplest terms, there are four positions an investor can take in options: buying call options (long call), selling/writing call options (short call), buying put options (long put), and selling/writing put options (short put).

The Option Greeks are a collection of variables that measure the sensitivity of option prices to changes in underlying factors. Mathematically, they are derivatives of components of option pricing models. Each factor has a Greek letter assigned to it, hence the name ‘Greeks’.

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