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Options are complicated. At their most basic level they are no different than a bet, so yes zero-sum. However when used in a spread or as a hedge or any other way to avoid risk or when sold against stock you own as an income generator, it's tough to call them zero-sum.

Puts and Calls are confusing as they are both something you buy. It's not like a sports bet where you're betting on the team to win so the other side will lose if they win. You can buy a put and a call in the same stock and profit on both if your strike prices are aligned properly.

The opposite side of buying a call is selling a call. Just like shorting a stock, when selling an option the most you can make is 100% and your loss potential is infinite. As an option seller, you're hoping the option expires worthless and out of the money so that you can keep the initial outlay. Most brokerages require a high level of clearance to allow you to sell naked puts and calls as it's generally a bad idea if you can't cover the potential upside.



For most products there is a legal framework that forbids buying an insurance contract unless you have an insurable interest. However, under the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, designed by Summers, Greenspan, Levitt, and Rainer, state insurance regulators are forbidden from regulating OTC derivatives as insurance products. They were already forbidden from regulating exchange traded derivatives (e.g. options and futures).


Yea I always used options as a form of protection, not the rest.




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