European vs. American style options

Thanks for the reply. What is the exact ratio of SPY to SPX? Is it 10 to 1? It appears to be 10 to 1, but I don't want to make any assumptions. I noticed the prices aren't ever the exact same, but they are very close.

What about DJX to DIA?


Thanks,

Frank

Hey Frank 99. SPY to SPX is 10 X 1. SPX is European (which might make the prices slightly different). One other item that might cause slight difference in price could be that SPX is AM settlement, meaning you have 1 less day to trade the options(Friday morning settlement vs Friday afternoon). By the way, with SPX you also get 1256 tax treatment (60/40). Good luck.

kny 3
:cool:
 
Thanks Kny3!

This was very useful.


Frank


Quote from kny3:

Thanks for the reply. What is the exact ratio of SPY to SPX? Is it 10 to 1? It appears to be 10 to 1, but I don't want to make any assumptions. I noticed the prices aren't ever the exact same, but they are very close.

What about DJX to DIA?


Thanks,

Frank

Hey Frank 99. SPY to SPX is 10 X 1. SPX is European (which might make the prices slightly different). One other item that might cause slight difference in price could be that SPX is AM settlement, meaning you have 1 less day to trade the options(Friday morning settlement vs Friday afternoon). By the way, with SPX you also get 1256 tax treatment (60/40). Good luck.

kny 3
:cool:
 
Quote from kny3:

Thanks for the reply. What is the exact ratio of SPY to SPX? Is it 10 to 1? It appears to be 10 to 1, but I don't want to make any assumptions. I noticed the prices aren't ever the exact same, but they are very close.

What about DJX to DIA?


Thanks,

Frank

Hey Frank 99. SPY to SPX is 10 X 1. SPX is European (which might make the prices slightly different). One other item that might cause slight difference in price could be that SPX is AM settlement, meaning you have 1 less day to trade the options(Friday morning settlement vs Friday afternoon). By the way, with SPX you also get 1256 tax treatment (60/40). Good luck.

kny 3
:cool:

Also, SPY is an Exchange-traded fund that is designed to replicate the perfomance of SPX less management fees so the two won't be exactly indentical.

XSP is the mini-SPX - i.e. 1/10th the size, with the rest of the contract specs identical to SPX.
 
Back
Top