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    I think it may be misnamed... in what sense are the puts covered except
    by your savings?
    
    If you sold short and then wrote puts on top of that, that might be
    more aptly termed a 'covered put', since you'd collect the put premium,
    and in the event of a decline in price, the loss you'd suffer on the
    put(s) would be partially or completely offset by the gain you'd receive
    from the short(s).  This would be the symmetric opposite of a 'covered
    call'.
    
    It sounds like you've got a naked put and a long... that's a leveraged
    bet that the price will go up.
    
    /Jim             
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    re: .1
    >I think it may be misnamed... in what sense are the puts covered except
    >by your savings?
    Yes, the put is covered by cash, analogous to a call being covered
    by shares of stock.  If a call is exercised, you are obligated to
    deliver stock, if a put is exercised you deliver cash.
    
    >If you sold short and then wrote puts on top of that, that might be
    >more aptly termed a 'covered put', since you'd collect the put premium,
    >and in the event of a decline in price, the loss you'd suffer on the
    >put(s) would be partially or completely offset by the gain you'd receive
    >from the short(s).  This would be the symmetric opposite of a 'covered
    >call'.
    Well sort of.  Except that selling short has potentially unlimited risk
    if the stock increases in price.  It'd be a weird thing, but there's
    nothing to keep a $10 stock from going to a million+ stock.  So your
    risk in selling short and writing a put is infinity minus the put
    premium.  The risk in writing a covered call is limited to the share
    value minus the call premium.
    If you just use cash to cover the put, with no short selling, the
    risk is the cash minus the put premium.  Therefore I suggest that this
    scenario is the opposing counterpart of a covered call.
    -r-
        
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    RE: .0
    
    Calls can be sold:
    
    	- by owning the stock and selling the covered calls against the stock
    	  owned
    	- by buying a lower strike price calls and selling higher priced
    	  calls, or buying a longer expiry date calls and selling a shorter
    	  expiry date calls. These are covered calls.
    	- "uncovered" or "naked", using the cash or other securities to
    	  meet the margin requirements
    
    Similary, puts can be sold
    
    	- by selling the stock (short or already owned as against the box) and
    	  selling the puts with the striking price lower than your selling
    	  price so that if they are exercised you can use it to cover or
    	  replenish the stock which you already sold
    
    	- by buying a higher strike price puts and selling lower priced
    	  puts (see Example 1), or buying a longer expiry date puts and
    	  selling a shorter expiry date puts (see Example 2).
    
    		Example 1: Buy March 45 puts and sell March 40 puts. You
    			   are covered here. If the stock price falls below
    			   $40 and the March 40 puts which you sold get
    			   exercised, you can always exrcise the March 45 puts
    			   which you bought. You get the difference of $5,
    			   minus the price you paid and the commision. If the
    			   price of the stock remains closer to $40 (just above
    			   $40), your March 45 put will still be worth something,
    			   but the one you sold will be worthless at expiration.
    			   If the price stays closer to $45, or above, you lose.
    
    		Example 2: Buy July 45 puts and sell March 45 puts. Again,
    			   you are covered here. Your hope here is that at
    			   the March expiration date, the puts you sold
    			   will be worthless (you can let it expire or buy
    			   it back, and sell April 45, do the same for next
    			   month, etc. if the same situation continues).
    
    	- "uncovered" or "naked", using the cash or other securities to
    	  meet the margin requirements.
    
    
    Hope this clarifies. Again, there are inherent risks in these and there
    is no assurance that you would make profit all the time. The stock
    price may move in the wrong direction and you may lose!
    
    /P.B. Bhat
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