
If a 13F Shows Put Options, It Might Not Mean What You Think
I keep seeing retail investors misread options positions in 13F filings. Time to clear this up. The Misconception "Fund X has puts on TSLA! They're bearish!" Not necessarily. Here's what options positions in a 13F can actually mean: Protective Puts (Bullish Intent) A manager holding 1M shares of TSLA + puts on TSLA is protecting a long position, not betting against it. This is portfolio insurance, not a bearish call. Covered Calls (Income Generation) Writing calls against existing stock positions generates premium income. The 13F shows the calls, but the intent is yield, not directional. Collar Strategies Buying puts + selling calls simultaneously to lock in a price range. Shows up as both put and call positions in the 13F, but the actual view is "I want to reduce volatility, not bet on direction." Arbitrage / Synthetic Positions Market makers and quant funds use options to create synthetic long/short positions. The 13F shows the components, but the combined position might be delta-neu
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