I do look at options as gambling, actually all investing is gambling- its just how one perceives the odds of there gamble. A pro craps player has ways to skew the odds to almost favor themselves over the casino. Option investors have ways to increase the probability of making money on their trade. The first response seems misguided at best and just plain wrong at worst. To say that buying a MRK option to expire in 35 days from purchase date that is 10% out of the money, ie. buying the 27.50 option when stock at 25.00 and only costs 10c I think is a legitimate investment (bet). My thesis for this is: if you look at the past 3 months the stock has moved 10% or more in each of the past 3 months, one direction or another. It announces earning 3 days after option expiration, Mrk typically runs up into earnings then pulls back (as do most stocks), and third-big pharma reached a deal w/ Obama that was better then most expected. My working theory on options is too look for "cheap" OTM options that in recent history the stock has seen and could legitimately re-test. I fail to see the difference to buying a cheap OTM options thatâs net 10c vs. buying a vertical call that is still net 10c but caps your upside. To answer others questions, I bought 100 10c options, sold 3 to get a little more then my money back and am currently letting the rest ride. The option is currently in the money closing at 0.95c today, will likely let it go a few more days, but do not anticipate the stock moving much above 28.00.