John Hancock Tax-Advantaged Dividend Income Fund Options
Search HTD call options and put options with real-time pricing, Greeks, and implied volatility data.
Search HTD Options NowAbout HTD Options
John Hancock Tax-Advantaged Dividend Income Fund (HTD) options give traders the right to buy or sell HTD stock at a predetermined price before a specific expiration date. Options are powerful financial instruments used for speculation, hedging, and income generation.
Call Options
HTD call options give you the right to buy shares at the strike price. Profit when John Hancock Tax-Advantaged Dividend Income Fund stock rises.
Put Options
HTD put options give you the right to sell shares at the strike price. Profit when John Hancock Tax-Advantaged Dividend Income Fund stock falls.
What Data You'll Find
Our free HTD options search tool provides:
- Strike Prices — Various price levels for calls and puts
- Expiration Dates — Filter by 7, 30, 60, or 90 days out
- Premium (Price) — Current option contract prices
- Volume & Open Interest — Liquidity and market activity
- Implied Volatility (IV) — Market's expected price movement
- Greeks — Delta, Gamma, Theta, Vega sensitivity measures
- Intrinsic & Extrinsic Value — Value breakdown
Understanding HTD Options Greeks
When trading John Hancock Tax-Advantaged Dividend Income Fund options, the Greeks help you understand how the option price will change:
Delta (Δ)
How much the HTD option price moves when the stock moves $1. A delta of 0.50 means the option gains $0.50 for every $1 stock increase.
Theta (Θ)
Daily time decay of the option. HTD options lose value each day as expiration approaches, even if the stock price stays flat.
Gamma (Γ)
Rate of Delta change. Higher gamma means Delta moves faster, making near-ATM HTD options more responsive to price changes.
Vega (ν)
Volatility sensitivity. When John Hancock Tax-Advantaged Dividend Income Fund's implied volatility rises, high-vega options become more valuable.
Learn more: