What if you could control a full stock position… without paying anywhere close to full price?
Most investors assume their only choices are to buy the shares outright, or sit on the sidelines and wait for a better price. But options allow for a third path — one that mirrors the risk and reward profile of a long stock position, but requires only a fraction of the capital outlay.
This strategy is called a synthetic long stock position, and in his latest video, Rick Orford breaks down exactly how professional traders use it to replicate ownership of high-priced stocks without tying up thousands of dollars.
If you’ve ever wanted to participate in a fast-moving stock but didn’t want to commit the cash, this is one strategy worth understanding.
A synthetic long stock mimics the profit and loss profile of actually owning 100 shares, but uses options instead of stock.
To initiate the position, on the same underlying asset:
Both options should carry the same strike price and the same expiration date.
When these two options are combined, the position behaves almost exactly like owning the stock:
In other words, you get the economic benefits of stock ownership... at a drastically reduced upfront cost.
If the stock rises above your call strike, the call goes in the money and starts generating profits just like owning shares.
Selling the put:
But it also creates assignment risk. If the stock falls below the put strike near expiration, you may be required to buy 100 shares at that price.
Synthetic positions aren’t a beginner-friendly trade, and that’s due to the risk involved. Traders need to watch out for:
This is why many traders prefer to close the short put early if momentum stalls.
Traders can use multiple Barchart tools to evaluate potential synthetic setups:
To understand how this works in practice — with real tickers and live examples — you can:
Watch this quick clip from Rick Orford: