Why warrants are so risky (and so powerful)
Warrants are leveraged to the underlying stock. A small move in the stock price can lead to a much larger move in the warrant’s price.
That leverage cuts both ways. If the stock rises well above the strike price, warrants can deliver outsized gains. If it doesn’t, the warrant can fall to $0.
A real-world example
During the financial crisis, the U.S. Treasury received warrants as part of bank bailouts. One well-known example gave investors the right to buy Bank of America stock at $13.30 per share.
As the bank recovered, its stock price surged well above the strike price. Investors who bought those warrants early saw massive gains, even though the underlying stock itself moved more modestly.
The same mechanics apply today: leverage magnifies both profits and losses.