Ultimate Guide To Covered Calls - YouTube

Channel: Option Alpha

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Hey everyone.
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This is Kirk, here again from optionalpha.com.
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In this video tutorial, I want to talk about a covered call spread.
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Covered calls are for the long-term stock investor that is definitely looking for a
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steady or a slightly rising stock price at least for the term of the option.
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This is generally a capital intensive strategy because you have to be long at least 100 shares
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of stock to sell a traditional covered call.
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Really, this is where most people get started in making the transition between options and
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strategies and moving away from trading stock just by itself and using some options and
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strategies in conjunction with stock.
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I definitely agree that if you're going to be a stock trader and stock investor, you've
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got to have some sort of covered call strategy inside your portfolio because it鈥檚 just
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the smart way of making trades.
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Let鈥檚 talk about how you setup a covered call specifically.
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The first thing that you鈥檙e going to do is you鈥檙e going to be long 100 shares of
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stock or you鈥檙e going to buy 100 shares of stock.
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In this case, you may already have 100 shares of stock, so in that case, you already meet
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that requirement, but if you don't have those shares of stock, you do have to buy 100 shares
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of stock to do this strategy.
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This is why it鈥檚 a little bit capital intensive when you get started.
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Once you have those 100 shares of stock, you can sell one out of the money call against
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those positions or that position of stock.
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Basically, the reason it鈥檚 called a covered call is because that one option covers 100
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shares of stock, so now your position is covered on both ends.
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What's the risk?
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Because you are still long 100 shares of stock, your risk is still in the decline of the stock
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past your new breakeven point as it heads lower.
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Selling the call option helps reduce the cost basis on the shares that you own.
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This is really the main benefit to doing a covered call strategy and one that we鈥檝e
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talked about a lot both in our blog and in our podcast that it reduces the cost basis
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on the shares that you purchase and actually leaves you a little bit of wiggle room for
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the stock to move down and still make some money between now and expiration.
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We鈥檒l show you a good example of that here in a little bit.
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As far as profit potential, covered calls do have a limited profit potential to the
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difference between the strike price and the stock price plus the credit received from
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selling that out of the money call.
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Although these are limited in profit potential, they make up for that in a higher chance of
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success overall on the trade.
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Because we鈥檙e moving our breakeven point lower and our cost basis on the trade lower,
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this gives us a greater probability of success overall going forward.
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Since we are short a naked option and the stock is not affected by volatility, increasing
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implied volatility generally does hurt this position.
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What that means is that we want to try as much as we can to target the strategy when
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implied volatility is really, really high in the underlying stock that we鈥檙e trading
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and this gives us the best edge in the market.
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As far as time decay or Theta, the passage of time as we generally get towards expiration
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does help this position since we are short premium that we received on the sale of the
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call.
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The closer and closer we get to expiration, we ideally want to keep all of that premium
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that we received on the call option and the closer we get to expiration, the faster this
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will materialize.
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As far as breakeven points, they鈥檙e very easy to calculate.
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You basically take the long stock price minus the credit received on the sale of the call.
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This is where we reduce the cost of owning the stock by selling a call.
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We鈥檙e going to take a look at an example here using the stock ticker symbol USO.
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USO is basically an ETF that trades and tracks an oil fund for the US.
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Again, that ticker symbol is USO.
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The stock has been really beaten down recently as of the time of this video.
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It鈥檚 down around 17.77 as far as a price.
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That鈥檚 where it closed today.
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When we go in here to do our covered call, the first thing that we have to do is own
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the underlying shares of the stock.
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In this case, we don鈥檛 own the stock, so we鈥檙e going to go ahead and buy the stock
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at that price of 17.77 where it closed today and we鈥檙e going to buy at least 100 shares
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of stock.
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This creates a lot of capital requirement in our account because we have to cover that
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trade, but this is how we build that covered call.
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The next thing that we're going to do is we鈥檙e going to try to sell an option that's out
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of the money.
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In this case, we鈥檙e just going to go ahead and sell the next nearest option out of the
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money which is the 18 calls above the market.
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For those calls, we should get about $1 for those once the market actually opens up tomorrow,
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so we鈥檙e going to go ahead and place that order here for about $1 and it鈥檚 about two
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pennies higher than where it closed today.
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That 18 call then helps reduce the cost of owning the shares by $1 which is that credit
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that we received.
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When we look at the payoff diagram here, you can see it looks just like the one that we
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had in the slides before, it鈥檚 got this steep angle on the left side.
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This is basically where you own the stock, this is your stock profit and lost curve and
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then it flattens out here right at the strike price of 18.
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You can see that strike price of 18 is where it flattens out because you sold a call at
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18.
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You are capping your profit beyond this point.
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You can鈥檛 make any more money should the stock go higher.
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But now, the benefit to doing that is you cap your upside potential in this trade and
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you鈥檙e capping it to about $110 in this trade, is that you move your breakeven point
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down or lower from where it鈥檚 at right now at 17.77, you move it down by a whole $1.
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In this case, USO can actually fall another $1 and you still would be okay at expiration.
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You wouldn鈥檛 make or lose any more money than you do right now.
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If USO fell less than $1, then you actually still make money at expiration and if USO
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moves higher, you still make money at expiration.
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This is why when trading covered calls, it's so important to realize that that reduction
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in cost basis or the reduction in the cost of owning the shares using that credit to
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offset that price helps you in your increased probability of success.
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Most people don't get that concept, but it's so critical to your ability to do these long-term.
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One of the key takeaways that we have for covered calls is that you should always remember
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that if the stock should move past your out of the money call strike at expiration, in
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our case with USO, it鈥檇 be moving past that 18 call strike, you will forfeit your stock
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to the other party in the transaction.
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That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 called a covered call because you're covering that trade with the
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shares that you already own.
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In that case, the shares will be taken directly out of your account and you鈥檇 have to re-buy
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the shares at some price in the future.
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But that's okay if that happens because that means that the stock made a huge move and
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you鈥檝e already banked a profit anyway, you just didn鈥檛 realize all of the profit from
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the stock moving higher.
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We personally don't favor these strategies because of the higher capital requirements.
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We think that there are other ways that you can get the very same profit loss diagram
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and the same risk reward features as doing a covered call, but with a lot less capital
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on the line.
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That's one of the ways that we use and teach options inside of our membership area at optionalpha.com.
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Even though this is a great strategy for long-term investors, we feel that there are better ways
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to make money trading this same profit loss diagram with much less capital.
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As always, I hope you guys enjoy these video tutorials.
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If you have any comments or questions, please add them right below here in the lesson page.
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Until next time, happy trading!