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(The writer is a Reuters contributor. The opinions expressed

are his own.)

By Chris Taylor

NEW YORK, July 9 (Reuters) – After the financial crisis of

2008 hit their stock portfolio hard, Colorado Springs

information technology contractor Mark Brisley and his wife Evie

Petrikkou were worried.

Casting about for a way to make up big losses, the two hit

upon a strategy often considered the purview of Wall Street

insiders: They could trade options.

Brisley began with the basics, buying and selling “puts”

-contracts that convey the right to sell a stock – to earn a

little bit extra and protect the family portfolio from another

debacle. Initially, he didn’t dabble in “calls” – contracts that

convey the right to buy a stock.

Now, five years later, he is a habitual trader who has

embraced increasingly arcane options strategies. “We treat it

almost like a business,” says Brisley, 51.

Brisley may be the new typical options player – a

do-it-yourself investor with a touch of gray.

The average options trader now is 53 years old; 28 percent

of all options users are between the ages of 55 and 64,

according to the Options Industry Council, a trade group. And

those mom-and-pop enthusiasts have pushed trading volume up 16

percent a year (by number of contracts) for the past decade,

according to the Chicago-based OCC, the world’s largest equity

derivatives clearing organization.

When Fred Tomczyk, chief executive of brokerage firm TD

Ameritrade, recently went to an investor education class on

options trading, he noticed the crowd around him. “It was all

people who look like me,” Tomczyk, 58, told Reuters in a recent

interview. “It was older people who are about to retire or just

retired.”

THE BABY BOOM EFFECT

Jared Levy, author of “Your Options Handbook” and managing

partner at Belpointe Alternative Investments in Greenwich,

Connecticut, says it is no surprise that baby boomers are

driving the options train. “A lot of the increasing volume has

been coming from boomers with high net worth who have gained the

ability to trade from home.”

Brokerage firms like Charles Schwab Corp, E*TRADE

and TD Ameritrade have attempted to capitalize on that

interest by building up their options trading platforms or

acquiring others. Schwab bought optionsXpress Holdings Inc in

2011, and TD Ameritrade bought thinkorswim Group Inc in 2009.

But retirees should think twice before trading in their

tennis rackets or bridge games for an options-trading hobby.

Options are complex derivative instruments that may protect your

portfolio and let you squeeze in some extra earnings – or cause

you to lose your shirt and your pants along with your stock

holdings.

Most options plays allow traders to maximize their bets, and

individual investors are notoriously bad about timing those bets

in the first place. In fact, a recent analysis of more than

200,000 investors done for Reuters by online financial planning

platform SigFig revealed that those who did not trade options

thumped those who did. Investors who stayed away from options

racked up 13.2 percent in portfolio gains for the year ended

June 25, while those who embraced the options trade lagged by 6

percentage points, with returns of 7.3 percent.

BASE HITS, NOT HOME RUNS

In their basic form, options contracts are known as puts and

calls. The buyer of a put has a right to sell the asset (like

100 shares of a stock or exchange-traded fund) at an agreed-on

price. That could provide downside protection if the asset

plummets in value. A call conveys the right to buy shares at an

agreed-on price.

Say, for example, you own 100 shares of a company trading at

$50 a share. You could sell a 90-day call at a $60-per-share

strike price, for $200. If the stock goes down, you’ll keep the

$200 and the call will expire. If the stock goes up to $58,

you’ll keep the shares, the $200 and the $800 gain (on 100

shares). Again, the call will expire.

If the stock goes up to $75, you’ll keep the $200 and the

$10 per-share gain between $50 and $60. But you’ll lose the

extra $15 per share in gains because you’ll have to sell the

stock at $60 a share – it will have been “called.”

Management consultant Thomas Manning of Lynnefield,

Massachusetts, another options-trading elder, takes a

conservative approach. He does about 100 options trades a year,

mainly buying puts and selling calls, and limits the amounts

involved to between 5 percent and 10 percent of his portfolio.

“The only way you’re going to hit home runs is to focus a

whole lot of capital in a particular area, and that is very

risky,” says Manning, 57. “I like to aim for singles and doubles

instead.”

(Follow us @ReutersMoney or at http://www.reuters.com/finance/personal-finance;

Editing by Linda Stern and John Wallace)