EMA P&L Curve
Emera Incorporated (EMA) operates in the Utilities sector, specifically the Regulated Electric industry, with a market capitalization near $15.91B, listed on NYSE, employing roughly 7,605 people, carrying a beta of 0.46 to the broader market. Emera Incorporated, an energy and services company, invests in generation, transmission, and distribution of electricity in the United States, Canada, Barbados, and the Bahamas. Led by Scott Carlyle Balfour, public since 2010-01-05.
A profit/loss curve charts the theoretical gain or loss of an options position across a range of underlying prices. It helps traders visualize risk, identify breakeven points, and compare strategies before committing capital.
- Exchange
- NYSE
- Sector
- Utilities
- Industry
- Regulated Electric
- Market Cap
- $15.91B
- Employees
- 7.6K
- IPO Date
- 2010-01-05
- CEO
- Scott Carlyle Balfour
- Beta
- 0.46
At the current $51.77 spot price with 34.0% ATM implied volatility and 34 days to the front expiration, an at-the-money long straddle carries an approximate combined premium near $4.30, producing breakevens at roughly $47.47 and $56.07. Market-implied 1-standard-deviation range extends from $46.72 to $56.82, which sets the relevant P&L evaluation window for most near-term strategies. Payoff diagrams should be rebuilt from the live options chain; the preceding values are illustrative and assume a single at-the-money straddle for reference.
Frequently asked EMA pl curve questions
- What does a EMA ATM straddle cost today?
- Using current EMA pricing (34.0% ATM IV, 34-day front expiration, $51.77 spot), an at-the-money long straddle (long call + long put at the same strike) carries an approximate combined premium near $4.30 per spread. Breakevens land at roughly $56.07 on the upside and $47.47 on the downside. The estimate uses the Brenner-Subrahmanyam approximation for at-the-money options under Black-Scholes.
- How do I read an options P&L curve?
- An options P&L curve plots theoretical position value at expiration (or at any chosen evaluation date) against the underlying price. The X-axis is the underlying price scenario, the Y-axis is position dollar P&L. The shape of the curve tells you the strategy's directional sensitivity, breakeven points, maximum profit and loss levels, and where time decay or volatility shifts will be most impactful. Multi-leg structures combine the curves of the individual legs to produce composite payoff diagrams.
- What's the difference between a P&L curve and a payoff diagram?
- Strictly: a payoff diagram shows option value at expiration (no time premium left), while a P&L curve typically shows position value at any evaluation date (with remaining time premium). The expiration payoff diagram has kinks at the strikes; the early P&L curve is smooth. For directional-vega trades, the early P&L curve also responds to IV shifts that the expiration payoff diagram does not capture - which is why options traders often look at both views.
- Why are illustrative EMA P&L numbers approximate?
- The numbers above use Black-Scholes assumptions (lognormal returns, constant volatility, no early exercise, no dividends). Real-world option prices reflect skew, term structure, jump risk, and (for US-style options) early exercise premium. Use the live options chain for actual quoted bid/ask prices when sizing trades; the values here illustrate magnitude only.