In the Money (ITM) / Out of the Money (OTM)

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Terms describing the intrinsic value status of an option relative to the underlying asset's current market price. A call option is in-the-money (ITM) when the market price exceeds the strike price. A put option is ITM when the market price is below the strike price. Options are out-of-the-money (OTM) when they have no intrinsic value (opposite conditions), and at-the-money (ATM) when the market price equals the strike price. Only ITM options have intrinsic value and are typically exercised.

Example

An investor holds a call option with a $50 strike when the stock trades at $55. This call is $5 in-the-money (market $55 > strike $50), with $5 intrinsic value. Conversely, a put option with a $60 strike on the same $55 stock is $5 in-the-money (market $55 < strike $60). A call with a $60 strike would be $5 out-of-the-money (no intrinsic value), and an option with a $55 strike would be at-the-money (market = strike).

Common Confusion

Students frequently reverse the conditions for calls vs puts. Remember: calls profit when prices rise (ITM when market > strike), while puts profit when prices fall (ITM when market < strike). Another common error is forgetting that at-the-money options (market = strike) have zero intrinsic value despite being neither ITM nor OTM. Students also confuse intrinsic value (ITM amount) with total option premium (intrinsic value + time value). Finally, many forget that OTM options can still have significant value due to time value, especially if expiration is far away.

How is In the Money (ITM) / Out of the Money (OTM) tested on the exam?

  • Determining whether a call or put option is ITM, ATM, or OTM given market price and strike price
  • Calculating intrinsic value for ITM options (market - strike for calls, strike - market for puts)
  • Identifying which options would be exercised at expiration based on moneyness
  • Understanding that OTM options expire worthless if not exercised before expiration
  • Recognizing that only ITM options have intrinsic value while all options can have time value

What practice questions cover In the Money (ITM) / Out of the Money (OTM)?

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Marcus owns four different options on ABC stock, which is currently trading at $48 per share. He reviews his positions: a call option with a $45 strike, a put option with a $45 strike, a call option with a $50 strike, and a put option with a $52 strike. At expiration, which options would have intrinsic value and be worth exercising (assuming no transaction costs)?

Question 2

Which statement correctly describes when a put option is in-the-money?

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Question 3

An investor holds a put option on XYZ stock with a strike price of $65. XYZ is currently trading at $58 per share. What is the intrinsic value of this put option?

Question 4

All of the following statements about in-the-money and out-of-the-money options are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

DEF stock is currently trading at $42 per share. An investor is analyzing four option positions. Which of the following statements are accurate?

1. A call option with a $40 strike is $2 in-the-money
2. A put option with a $40 strike is $2 out-of-the-money
3. A call option with a $45 strike is at-the-money
4. A put option with a $47 strike is $5 in-the-money

šŸ’” Memory Aid

CALL = Can profit by calling stock away when price is HIGH (ITM when market > strike). PUT = Can profit by putting stock to seller when price is LOW (ITM when market < strike). Think: "Calls go UP, Puts go DOWN" for ITM status. At-the-money = Equal = No intrinsic value (market = strike).

What concepts relate to In the Money (ITM) / Out of the Money (OTM)?

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