I've tried to do some searching but found nothing online for the following question:
Can a CEO buy put options on their stock to protect the losses in the stock value.
For example if I was a CEO, and owned 100 shares trading at 30, could I buy 1 put option at 25 strike (to cover the 100 shares) to protect against losses.
Does anyone have an sec ruling explaining this?
Now logically there are arguments for both sides:
For:
The above position is simply a call option and only has upside. (So the CEO isn't betting on a fall in their company's stock, just protecting against one).
Against:
Why would a CEO buy put protection, wouldn't that imply that he thinks the company's stock is going to go down in value? (I think this is ambiguous though because selling stock could mean many things)
What are people's take on this, and also can anyone provide factual evidence for what the real rules are? I failed at google.
please note I'm not saying buy more put options than would cover the stock because this would create a position that will make money when the stock's value falls.
Can a CEO buy put options on their stock to protect the losses in the stock value.
For example if I was a CEO, and owned 100 shares trading at 30, could I buy 1 put option at 25 strike (to cover the 100 shares) to protect against losses.
Does anyone have an sec ruling explaining this?
Now logically there are arguments for both sides:
For:
The above position is simply a call option and only has upside. (So the CEO isn't betting on a fall in their company's stock, just protecting against one).
Against:
Why would a CEO buy put protection, wouldn't that imply that he thinks the company's stock is going to go down in value? (I think this is ambiguous though because selling stock could mean many things)
What are people's take on this, and also can anyone provide factual evidence for what the real rules are? I failed at google.
please note I'm not saying buy more put options than would cover the stock because this would create a position that will make money when the stock's value falls.