On July 1, 2017, Stan Getz, Inc., bought call option contracts for 500 shares of Selmer Manufacturing

Question:

On July 1, 2017, Stan Getz, Inc., bought call option contracts for 500 shares of Selmer Manufacturing common stock. The contracts cost $200, expire on September 15, and have an exercise price of $40 per share. The market price of Selmer's stock that day was also $40 a share. On July 31, 2017, Selmer stock was trading at $38 a share, and the option contracts' fair value was $125-that is, Getz could buy the identical $40 strike price contracts on July 31 for $125. On August 31, 2017, the market price of Selmer stock was $44 a share, and the fair value of the options contracts was $2,075.
Required:
1. Prepare the journal entry to record Getz's purchase of call option contracts on July 1, 2017.
2. Prepare the journal entry to record the change in fair value of the option contracts on July 31, 2017.
3. Prepare the journal entry to record the change in fair value of the option contracts on August 31, 2017.
4. Why are the option contracts worth so much more on August 31 ($2,075) than they were worth on July 31 ($125)?
5. What entry would Getz make to record exercising the options on September 15, 2017, when Selmer's shares were trading at $46?
6. Suppose instead that Getz allowed the option contracts to expire on September 15, 2017, without exercising them. What entry would Getz then make?
Strike Price
In finance, the strike price of an option is the fixed price at which the owner of the option can buy, or sell, the underlying security or commodity.
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Financial Reporting and Analysis

ISBN: 978-1259722653

7th edition

Authors: Lawrence Revsine, Daniel Collins, Bruce Johnson, Fred Mittelstaedt, Leonard Soffer

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