noun Internet Slang

strike

STRYKE · noun · informal

The price at which an option can be exercised.

0

Definitions

1

The strike price: the fixed price at which an option's holder can buy (call) or sell (put) the underlying. Choosing strikes is central to any options play.

“I picked a strike way out of the money for the lottery payout.”
by community
0

strike In A Sentence

I picked a strike way out of the money for the lottery payout.

Origin & Usage

Standard options terminology, constantly referenced in WSB options discussion.

Variants strike price

People Also Ask

What is a strike in options?

The strike is the strike price — the fixed price at which an option's holder can buy (for a call) or sell (for a put) the underlying stock. Picking a strike is central to any options play.

What does 'out of the money' strike mean?

It's a strike set far from the current price, so the option only pays off with a big move. Traders pick these for cheap, lottery-style bets with large potential payouts.

How do you choose an option strike?

Traders pick strikes based on how far and fast they expect the stock to move — closer strikes are safer but cost more, while distant strikes are cheap long shots.

Comments 0