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The Covered Call (1)
You decide you are intrigued by the prospects of writing calls to capture premiums and wonder if there is any way to protect yourself against a rise in the share price of the underlying in excess of the strike price as can occur with a naked call. Well yes, there is a solution and its name is the covered call.
The covered call is a fairly straightforward strategy to implement and it involves buying the underlying shares at the same time you sell the associated calls or selling those calls after the underlying shares have been purchased. This completely mitigates the risk of having to buy shares to deliver if your call is exercised, particularly in a tight turn-around window. The cost of purchasing the shares is a cost you may face anyway and you will only give up the interest that the share cost funds would have generated, which is a relatively small amount for a lot of protection and peace of mind. Of course, if you happen to have started with naked calls, you can simply buy sufficient shares of the underlying and thereby convert your naked call position into a covered call position.
The mechanics of completing a covered call transaction are what you might expect at this point in the workshop. If you already own the underlying, you only need sell as many calls as you have 100 share multiples of the underlying. So, if you own 500 shares of IBM, you can sell up to 5 calls and still be covered. You don’t have to sell calls on all your IBM shares, but you’ll maximize your income if you do. If you write more calls than the 100 share multiples you own, you will be naked by the number of calls in excess of those shares. Thus, if you own 500 shares of IBM and sell 7 calls, your broker will consider you to be naked on 2 of those calls and may require you to add funds to your account if the assets there are insufficient to satisfy any need to purchase those 200 shares of IBM should exercise occur.
Most brokerage firms cater to the situation where you’d like to buy the underlying and sell the covered call at the same time. The brokers who specialize in options all have specific templates that show up on your monitor when you’re ready to complete this transaction. It’s generally called a buy-write meaning you buy the underlying and write the associated calls. It is a net debit position wherein you pay the broker only for your cost after the call premiums are accounted for. For example, assume you want to write a covered call on Advanced Data Processing. ADP is currently selling at $33.32 a share and its April 35 call premium is $1.00. Thus, your limit purchase order would be $32.32 and that would be your bid. You get instantaneous credit for the premium and your total cost for this transaction, if filled at your bid price, would be $3,232 (plus costs) for 100 shares.
When the April expiration date rolls around, if the stock gets called away from you, you will earn the $100 premium plus the difference between the strike price of $35 and your cost for the stock. Not too shabby for what is a 6 week investment.
Thus, I consider the covered call, if correctly implemented, to be the equivalent of a CD or savings account on steroids. I try to make a relatively small profit on each covered call I write, say 4% to 5%, and will gladly accept more if I can get it while still adhering to my rules. You’d be surprised how quickly these premiums add up particularly when I can repeatedly write covered call positions on a shorter term basis.
When you write a covered call, the fact that you own sufficient shares of the underlying negates to open ended obligation to cover at some point in the future if you are exercised.
What then is the danger with a covered call, what is its weakness? The danger is that the underlying will drop in value by a sizeable amount, quickly, before you can extricate yourself from the trade. Then you will be left owning shares in a company that is unattractive on a fundamental or technical basis, hoping for a share price recovery so you can extricate yourself. There are some remedial strategies an option trader can use in such situations, but a poor underlying stock is a poor underlying stock and recovery may be slow and probably not to your break even point.
Many option traders get into such a position because they go for the large premium and big payoff. There are several option web sites that feature a bunch of candidate trades that list the trades in order of premium size with no regard to the quality and capabilities of the underlying company. Yet, the quality and capability of the underlying company is where most of the risk is in a covered call. Therefore, I carefully check the quality of the company on which I’m writing a covered call before entering into a covered call in all instances.
Where and how do I check for quality you might ask? For one thing, I create or update my stock study on a candidate company. Then I go to this site, StockCentral, to check on the TakeStock quality rating. You can also ascertain quality at Manifest Investing, in Value Line or using an S&P report from your broker. It doesn’t matter much which of these sources you check, but do check at least one of them.
You should note that high or higher quality stocks usually have lower volatility meaning that their premiums aren’t as generous as those obtainable from lower quality stocks. That tradeoff is one I’m willing to make.
I also have a personal rule against buying options on an underlying that’s selling for under $10. This is not an absolute rule and I have written covered calls on Oracle when it was under $10 and would on GE which is now under $10 if all the other factors were in alignment and the position was warranted.
In fact, it won’t take you long in writing covered calls to realize that it may be better revenue-wise to write calls for an underlying selling at $12 for example than writing calls for an underlying selling at $25 or $30. Since I can buy twice as many or more shares and sell thus twice as many or more calls on the $12 stock for the same total investment and a probable higher premium revenue, I’ll likely be attracted to the lower price stock. However, I stay away from such trades unless my stock study and quality ratings convince me there’s no difference in the danger that the $12 stock will drop further and faster than the higher priced stocks. Don’t be afraid to go for the glory (higher total premium), but try to insure that you are unnecessarily compromising on quality when you elect the go with the $12 underlying..
My covered call strategy is basically premised on two rules:
One: Demand quality in the underlying you write a covered call on;
Two: See and obey rule number one!!
Next, more on my covered call strategy and covered calls for investment clubs.
Saul…