How options pricing works:
Let’s make sense of all of this terminology with an example. Consider a stock that’s currently trading for INR 100 a share. Here’s how the premiums—or the prices—function for different options based on the strike price.
When trading options, you pay a premium up front, which then gives you the option to buy this hypothetical stock—call options —or sell the stock—put options—at the designated strike price by the expiration date.
A lower strike price has more intrinsic value for call options since the options contract lets you buy the stock at a lower price than what it’s trading for right now. If the stock’s price remains INR 100, your call options are in-the-money, and you can buy the stock at a discount.
Conversely, a higher strike price has more intrinsic value for put options because the contract allows you to sell the stock at a higher price than where it’s trading currently. Your options are in-the-money if the stock stays at INR 100, but you have the right to sell it at a higher strike price, say INR 110.