A Zero Cost Collar is an options trading strategy that can offer downside protection at the expense of limited upside potential. By simultaneously purchasing a put option and selling a call option, investors can mitigate their outlay and potentially make the strategy cost-neutral.
A Zero Cost Collar is an options trading strategy used for hedging an investment’s potential downside risk while foregoing a certain amount of its potential upside gain. This is achieved by the simultaneous purchase of a put option and the sale of a call option with the same expiration date, making the strategy theoretically cost-neutral.
This page also covers the common naming variants “zero-cost collar strategy” and, in practical options-trading usage, the broader zero-cost-strategy wording when it refers to the same cost-neutral collar hedge.
A put option grants the holder the right, but not the obligation, to sell a specified quantity of an underlying asset at a predetermined price (the strike price) within a certain time frame. By purchasing a put option, investors can ensure that they can sell their asset at the strike price even if its market price drops significantly.
A call option gives the holder the right, but not the obligation, to buy a specified quantity of an underlying asset at the strike price within a certain time frame. In a Zero Cost Collar, selling a call option can generate enough premium to offset the cost of the put option, making the overall strategy cost-neutral.
The defining characteristic of a Zero Cost Collar is its potential to be implemented without a net outlay of capital. The premium received from selling the call option can approximately offset the cost of purchasing the put option.
The primary benefit of a Zero Cost Collar is the downside protection provided by the put option. This can help investors mitigate losses in case the price of the underlying asset falls below the put’s strike price.
By selling the call option, the investor caps the upside potential of the underlying asset. If the asset’s price rises above the call’s strike price, the investor would be obligated to sell the asset at the strike price, thereby limiting the upside gain.
Assume an investor holds shares in Company XYZ, currently priced at $100 per share. The investor:
In this scenario, the net cost of entering this collar strategy is zero, creating a “Zero Cost Collar.” The investor is protected against a decline below $95 per share but must forgo any profits if the stock price exceeds $105 per share.
Zero-cost collar, zero-cost collar strategy, and zero-cost-collar strategy are usually used for the same hedging idea. In this site, the collar page is the canonical home for that cost-neutral options structure.
This involves using standard put and call options that expire on the same date with strike prices equidistant from the current price of the underlying asset.
Structured collars can involve customized options contracts, with varying strike prices and expiration dates tailored to the specific needs of the investor.
Zero Cost Collars require liquid options markets to ensure that the put and call options can be purchased and sold at favorable prices.
The strategy’s effectiveness depends on the volatility of the underlying asset and market conditions. During periods of stable low volatility, the premiums for options might narrow, making it more challenging to construct a truly “cost-neutral” collar.