Info Gulp

What Is an Optionable Stock?


Last Updated:
Info Gulp employs strict editorial principles to provide accurate, clear and actionable information. Learn more about our Editorial Policy.

    Highlights

  • An optionable stock has listed options available for trading due to meeting exchange criteria on liquidity and volume
  • There are nearly 6,000 companies and hundreds of ETFs with optionable stocks, making hedging easier for investors
  • Stocks must meet specific requirements like minimum share price, outstanding shares, and unique shareholders to qualify
  • Non-optionable stocks complicate risk mitigation, often requiring over-the-counter options instead
Table of Contents

What Is an Optionable Stock?

Let me explain what an optionable stock really is. It's a stock where the shares have the kind of liquidity and trading volume that convinces an exchange to list options for it. For a stock to qualify as optionable, it has to satisfy specific criteria set by the exchanges, like a minimum share price, a certain number of outstanding shares, and a minimum number of unique shareholders, among other things.

Key Takeaways

Here's what you need to know right away: An optionable stock means there are options listed on it that you can trade. To get there, the stock must hit the minimum standards from the exchanges. Right now, you'll find almost 6,000 companies with optionable stocks, plus several hundred exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that also have listed options. If a stock isn't optionable, hedging your positions in it becomes a lot tougher, which complicates managing the risks.

Understanding Optionable Stocks

When I talk about an optionable stock, I'm referring to one that has options listed and ready to trade on a market exchange. Not every publicly traded company has these exchange-traded options available. That's partly because they need to meet minimum requirements, such as a certain share price and amount of outstanding shares.

At present, there are nearly 6,000 companies with optionable stocks, along with hundreds of ETFs that offer listed options. Being optionable lets you buy options on the underlying stock, which gives you the right to buy or sell shares at a predetermined price.

For stocks that aren't optionable, hedging gets more complicated and makes risk mitigation harder. In those cases, you can work with your broker-dealer to set up an over-the-counter (OTC) options contract.

These days, it's straightforward to check if a stock has listed options. Just head to the Cboe Options Exchange website and see if options are listed for that particular stock.

Requirements for a Stock to Be Optionable

To have options listed on a stock, it must meet specific criteria under current Cboe rules. There are five main ones you should be aware of.

Primary Criteria for Optionable Stocks

  • The underlying equity security must be listed on a recognized exchange like the NYSE, AMEX, or Nasdaq—it can't be over-the-counter, such as on pink sheets or OTCBB.
  • The closing price of the company's shares must have a minimum per-share price for most trading days in the three prior calendar months, currently $3.00 for covered securities or $7.50 for non-covered ones.
  • There must be at least 7,000,000 shares of the underlying security owned by persons not required to report under Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
  • The company needs at least 2,000 unique shareholders.
  • The average trading volume across all markets must be at least 2,400,000 shares in the preceding 12 months.

Additional Notes on Requirements

If a company misses even one of these criteria, exchanges like Cboe won't allow options trading on that security. Also, due to the price condition, no company can have options traded until at least three months after its IPO.

Fast Fact

Remember, this information isn't tax, investment, or financial advice. It's presented without considering your specific objectives, risk tolerance, or circumstances, and it might not suit everyone. Investing always carries risks, including potential loss of principal.

Other articles for you

What Is SEC Form 4: Statement of Changes in Beneficial Ownership?
What Is SEC Form 4: Statement of Changes in Beneficial Ownership?

SEC Form 4 is a required filing for company insiders to report changes in their stock holdings to ensure transparency.

What Is a Recourse Loan?
What Is a Recourse Loan?

A recourse loan allows lenders to pursue a borrower's additional assets beyond the collateral if the borrower defaults on the loan.

What Sets Non-Recourse Debt Apart?
What Sets Non-Recourse Debt Apart?

Non-recourse debt limits lenders to seizing collateral upon default, while recourse debt allows them to pursue borrowers for any remaining balance.

Understanding the European Sovereign Debt Crisis
Understanding the European Sovereign Debt Crisis

The European sovereign debt crisis was a financial turmoil from 2008 affecting several Eurozone countries with high debt, bank collapses, and rising bond yields.

What Is Risk Tolerance?
What Is Risk Tolerance?

Risk tolerance measures how much financial uncertainty and potential loss an investor is willing to accept for higher returns.

Understanding the Head and Shoulders Pattern
Understanding the Head and Shoulders Pattern

The head and shoulders pattern is a technical analysis tool that signals a potential reversal from a bullish to a bearish trend in stock prices.

What Is Revenue Per Available Room (RevPAR)?
What Is Revenue Per Available Room (RevPAR)?

RevPAR is a key metric in hospitality that measures a hotel's revenue generation by assessing room occupancy and rates.

Understanding Williams %R
Understanding Williams %R

Williams %R is a momentum indicator that identifies overbought and oversold market conditions to guide trading decisions.

What Is Form 5405: First-Time Homebuyer Credit and Repayment of the Credit?
What Is Form 5405: First-Time Homebuyer Credit and Repayment of the Credit?

Form 5405 was used to claim a now-defunct first-time homebuyer tax credit for purchases between 2008 and 2010, and is now mainly for repaying that credit.

What Is Upstream?
What Is Upstream?

Upstream in the oil and gas industry refers to the exploration and production stages where companies locate and extract crude oil and natural gas reserves.

Follow Us

Share



by using this website you agree to our Cookies Policy

Copyright © Info Gulp 2025