
Naked Position
In securities trading in general, a naked position refers to a securities position, long or short, that is not hedged from market risk. However, in more practical terms, the seller of uncovered puts or calls will likely repurchase them well before the price of the underlying security moves adversely too far away from the strike price, based on their risk tolerance and stop loss settings. More advanced options traders can hedge risk with multiple positions of puts and calls, called combinations. A naked position is also commonly used to refer to an option that is sold without a position in the underlying security as protection against the risk of option assignment. In securities trading in general, a naked position refers to a securities position, long or short, that is not hedged from market risk. A naked stock position does not have the hedging associated with a call or put option or perhaps an opposite position in a related stock.

What is a Naked Position?
In securities trading in general, a naked position refers to a securities position, long or short, that is not hedged from market risk. Both the potential gain and the potential risk are greater when a position is naked instead of covered or hedged in some way. In options trading this phrase specifically refers to an option sold by a trader without an established position in the underlying security.



Understanding a Naked Position
A naked stock position does not have the hedging associated with a call or put option or perhaps an opposite position in a related stock. For example, a long in Coke and a short in Pepsi.
A naked position is inherently risky because there is no protection against an adverse move. Most investors do not consider owning stocks to be excessively risky, especially because in most cases it is easy to sell the position back to the market. However, a declining market for an investor holding a long position in a stock still has the potential to deliver significant losses. In this case, holding a put option against the long stock position could, for a small price, cap losses to a manageable amount.
The investor's profit potential, before commissions, would be reduced by the premium, or cost, of the option. Consider it to be an insurance policy the investor hopes never to use.
Investors selling stocks short without hedges face even greater risk since the upside potential for a stock is theoretically unlimited. In this case, owning a call on the underlying stock would limit that risk.
Naked Options
In the options market, uncovered or naked calls and puts also have risk. In this case, it is the options seller, or writer, that has no hedge against being assigned. Options buyers only risk the amount paid to buy the options, which is normally significantly less than the amount needed to purchase actual shares of stock or another underlying asset.
Options sellers, on the other hand, can have unlimited risk if not hedged. For example, an investor sells a call option on a stock and that stock soars higher in price before expiration. The options buyer could likely exercise the option, forcing the seller to go out into the open market to buy the stock at the higher price in order to deliver it to the options buyer. If the options seller owned an offsetting position in the underlying stock, their risk would be limited.
Put sellers would have nearly unlimited risk should the underlying security fall towards zero. A corresponding short position in the underlying stock would limit that risk.
However, in more practical terms, the seller of uncovered puts or calls will likely repurchase them well before the price of the underlying security moves adversely too far away from the strike price, based on their risk tolerance and stop loss settings.
More advanced options traders can hedge risk with multiple positions of puts and calls, called combinations.
Related terms:
Assignment
An assignment is the transfer of rights or property. In financial markets, it is a notice to an options writer that the option has been exercised. read more
Call Option
A call option is a contract that gives the option buyer the right to buy an underlying asset at a specified price within a specific time period. read more
Combination
A combination generally refers to an options trading strategy that involves the purchase or sale of multiple calls and puts on the same asset. read more
Commission
A commission, in financial services, is the money charged by an investment advisor for giving advice and making transactions for a client. read more
Exercise
Exercise means to put into effect the right to buy or sell the underlying financial instrument specified in an options contract. read more
Expiration Date (Derivatives)
The expiration date of a derivative is the last day that an options or futures contract is valid. read more
Hedge
A hedge is a type of investment that is intended to reduce the risk of adverse price movements in an asset. read more
Long Position
A long position conveys bullish intent as an investor will purchase the security with the hope that it will increase in value. read more
Naked Option
A naked option is created when the option seller does not currently own any, or enough, of the underlying security to meet their potential obligation. read more
Open Market
An open market is an economic system with no barriers to free market activity. Barriers to free market activity include tariffs, taxes, licensing requirements or subsidies. read more