Binary Options are referred to as ‘all-or-nothing’ options. Binary means either 0 or 1. And here, it implies two outcomes. You are either “in the money”, or “out the money”. You either win a payout or gain nothing.
Here, the payouts are known beforehand and do not depend on the underlying price, like in the case of vanilla options.
This makes binary options simple and easy to execute. In binary options, there are call and put options too and serve the same function.
In a call option, you are “in the money”, when the market price of the asset is above the strike price, and in put option, you are “in the money” when the market price of the asset is below that of the strike price.
Depending on your market analysis, you will choose either buy or sell the underlying asset. Keep in mind that the strike price of the asset is fixed.
Your payout depends on the payout percentage of the asset. This is determined by your broker and the type of asset you choose for trading.
The asset range in binary options quite varied. You can trade anything from forex pairs to cryptos to indices, commodities, stocks, and more as binary options.
Binary Options are neither European nor American options in nature, unlike vanilla options. All binary options is concerned with is the fixed payout.
Another major difference between these two is the expiration time. Like mentioned above, vanilla options expire once a month. On the other hand, binary options have varied expiry times ranging from a few seconds to many months.
This offers traders more flexibility in deciding how long their trades should last. This is not possible with vanilla options unless you are trading American style options.
Binary options are quite popular in Europe and there are regulatory bodies like CySEC which now regulate the binary options broker operating in Europe.
Now that we are done with the differences between these two option types, let’s take a look at another option type which is known as digital options.