Covered Call Option Writing is the subject of this edition in a series on how to trade stock options for income, hedging or pure speculation (see How Stock Options Work : Puts and Calls for intro). As outlined in my introductory article, a call option grants the holder the right to exercise the option when a stock is “in the money” after the call seller had captured a premium for initiating the transaction. The call option owner (for all practical purposes) then captures the difference between the current share price and the strike price times 100 since an options contract controls 100 shares. What is a Covered Call? In the case of covered call option writing, the investor holds 100 shares of the underlying stock for each option sold. If you own 100 shares of corporation XYZ trading at $50 per share and sell 1 Call Option Contract with a strike price of $60 and January expiration for $500, as long as shares are below $60 upon expiration in January, you’d keep the $500 because the contract would expire worthless. If shares move past $60 and the option holder exercises the option (which they generally do at the very last moment, unless there’s a dividend date in play), you can either buy back the option or when exercised, your shares will be unloaded at $60, regardless of where the stock is trading. Covered Call Option Writing Example – Real Life: Apple Here’s an example I actually employed with Apple earlier in the year (and I continue to roll the same position as Apple shares continue to appreciate). Note that even though Apple shares DECLINED during the period of the transaction, I actually made money! $600 in 3 months time for holding a stock I wanted to hold anyway. Bought 100 shares APPLE (AAPL) at 94.6 = $9460 Outflow Sold a Call with April09 Expiry 110 strike for 11.30 = $1130 Inflow Closed out Call (bought back) for $120 = $120 Outflow ================================================== Purchase ($9460) – Current ($9050) = $410 loss on shares Option Inflow ($1130) – Outflow ($120) = $1010 gain on option Net Gain of $600 in 3 months when shares declined!!! When shares move in the right direction, such as the move from when this was first published in Feb09, the gains are astounding. You can get both the capital appreciation AND the option income. The details of the initial article: Apple Covered Calls Benefits of writing covered calls Selling covered calls works out great in a flat or moderately declining market. The investor captures income from the sold calls while holding the underlying stock that they want to hold anyway. Tax Benefit Strategy - Let’s say you’re sitting on a huge gain on shares of a particular stock and it’s September. For tax reasons, you don’t intend on selling the shares until next tax year to avoid having to pay taxes next April. You’re resolved to hang on to the stock into the new year whether it moves up or down. So, why not sell a covered call with January expiration? In addition to the capital gain you already have and any additional gains, you can guarantee yourself the income from the sold call as well. If the share prices have run up significantly, an options contract is going to carry a nice premium for income. If the stock moves past the strike price , it’s trouble right? Well, only if you sit on your hands – and even then, you’ve just reached your max gain, but you still made money – don’t we all wish we had that problem! You can always “move the chains”. This is what I’m doing now with Apple shares since they’ve almost doubled from when I first began this strategy. As long as there’s still some time left on the option, the holder at the other end isn’t going to exercise it because they’re leaving money on the table. There is plenty of “time premium” left on the option. They will ride it out. For full disclosure, I’ve been selling covered calls against Apple shares for some time now and at this point, shares have risen so quickly that the sold call is actually in the money now. I have a Jan 160 call outstanding against my 100 shares. But that’s OK! I’m sitting on a $7000 gain on the shares and I’ve made a few thousand dollars now

The rest is here:
How Stock Options Work Series: Covered Call Writing
