A cash-secured put involves selling a put option while holding enough cash in your account to buy 100 shares if assigned. You collect premium upfront and either keep the premium if the stock stays above your strike, or you're obligated to buy shares at the strike price.
Quick Stats:
You sell a put option, collect premium immediately, and hold cash equal to strike × 100. If the stock stays above the strike, the put expires worthless and you keep the full premium. If the stock drops below the strike, you're assigned and buy 100 shares — but at a discount, since your effective cost basis is reduced by the premium received.
Outcome 1: Stock Stays Above Strike (Best Case) — Put expires worthless. Keep full premium. Repeat with a new put or move on.
Outcome 2: Stock Drops Below Strike (Assignment) — Put gets assigned. You buy 100 shares at the strike price. Your cost basis = strike - premium received. You now own stock at a discount.
Only sell puts on stocks you'd be happy owning. Good candidates include quality companies with solid fundamentals, stocks near support levels, or strong stocks in a temporary pullback. Avoid meme stocks, penny stocks, or companies with deteriorating fundamentals.
Sell puts at or near technical support. As a general guide for a stock trading at $105: a conservative approach is the $95 put (10% cushion), moderate is the $100 put (5% cushion), and aggressive is the $103 put (2% cushion). Further OTM = less premium but safer. Closer to price = more premium but higher assignment risk.
30-45 DTE is the standard range — it balances premium collection with time. 60+ DTE gives more premium but longer capital commitment. 7-21 DTE turns over faster but collects less. Recommended: 30-45 days for best risk-reward balance.
Formula: Strike Price × 100 = Cash Required. Example: Sell a $100 put → Required cash = $100 × 100 = $10,000. This cash must remain in your account as collateral.
Use Sell-to-Open (STO) with a limit order for a better fill. Premium is collected immediately. Your buying power is reduced by the cash held as collateral.
Maximum profit = premium collected. Example: Sell $100 put for $3.00 → Max profit: $300. Occurs when the stock closes at or above strike at expiration. Return on capital: $300 / $10,000 = 3% in 30-45 days.
Formula: (Strike × 100) - Premium Received. Worst case (stock goes to $0): $10,000 - $300 = $9,700. In practice, losses are much smaller. If assigned at $100 and stock is at $90, real loss = $700 after premium.
Formula: Strike price - premium received. Example: Strike $100 - Premium $3.00 = Breakeven: $97. If assigned, your effective purchase price is $97, not $100.
AAPL is trading at $180 with strong support at $170. You want to own AAPL but think $180 is expensive. IV Rank is 50 (elevated premiums). You're willing to buy at $170.
Trade: Sell $170 put, 35 DTE. Premium: $5.00 ($500). Cash required: $17,000. Max profit: $500. Breakeven: $165.
Scenario 1: AAPL stays above $170 → Put expires worthless → Keep $500 → Return: 2.9% in 35 days (~30% annualized) → Repeat.
Scenario 2: AAPL drops to $165, put assigned → Buy 100 shares at $170 → Effective cost: $165/share → You're at breakeven immediately, owning a stock you wanted anyway.
Cash-secured puts have positive delta (short puts = bullish position). A -0.30 delta put means your position gains ~$30 when the stock moves $1 up. Delta also indicates approximately a 30% chance of assignment.
Theta works for you. Example: Theta of +0.08 = $8 profit per day from decay. Over 30 days that's $240 of your $300 max profit — just from time passing.
You're short options, so falling IV helps you. Sell when IV is high to collect fat premiums, and profit as IV contracts back to normal. Avoid selling when IV is extremely low.
Don't wait for expiration. Buy back profitable puts early to free up capital and reduce risk.
Example: Collected $300, put now worth $100 → Buy back for $100, keep $200 profit, free up $10,000 for the next trade. Why risk $100 to make the last $100 while tying up $10k for weeks?
If assigned, accept it and move to Step 2 of the Wheel Strategy: sell covered calls against your shares to generate additional income and potentially sell at a profit. Example: Assigned at $100 (effective cost $97), stock at $95 → Sell $100 covered call for $2.50 → If called away: ($100 - $97 + $2.50) = $5.50/share = $550 profit.
If you don't want assignment, roll the put. Buy back the current put, then sell a new put at a lower strike with a later expiration — usually for a net credit. Example: Sold $100 put for $3.00, now worth $6.00 (stock at $96) → Buy back for $6.00 ($300 loss) → Sell $95 put (45 DTE) for $4.00 → Net credit: $100. New breakeven: $94. Only roll if you're still bullish on the stock.
Cash-secured puts are Step 1 of the popular Wheel Strategy — a method for generating income indefinitely whether you own stock or not.
Never tie up more than 20-30% of your account in cash-secured puts. Spread across 3-5 different stocks to reduce concentration risk. Example: $100,000 account → Max $30,000 allocated → Up to 3 contracts at the $100 strike.
1. Selling puts on stocks you don't want to own. Premium on a penny stock isn't worth getting assigned garbage. Only sell puts on quality stocks you'd buy at the strike price.
2. Selling when IV is low. IV Rank of 10 collecting $100 for $10k in risk is a 1% return — not worth the capital tie-up. Only sell when IV Rank is above 40.
3. Not taking profits early. Collected $300, put is now $50, waiting for $0? You're tying up capital for minimal gain. Close at 50% and redeploy.
4. Panicking on assignment. Assignment is the expected outcome half the time. If you wanted the stock, this is fine. Plan for it before entering the trade.
5. Selling puts without the cash. Always have the full cash to buy 100 shares. No margin shortcuts.
Same-day expiration puts offer maximum theta decay and quick capital turnover — but with real risk. SPY at $500 at 10 AM: sell the $495 put (1% OTM) for $0.80 ($80), exit at 50% profit or close by 3:30 PM to avoid gamma risk. SPY can gap down 1-2% in minutes, so assignment risk is real.
Premium collected is taxed as short-term capital gains (ordinary income) in the year received, even if the position is still open. If assigned, the premium reduces your cost basis in the shares — no tax event until you sell. Consult a tax professional for guidance specific to your situation.
A cash-secured put involves selling a put option while holding enough cash in your account to buy 100 shares of stock at the strike price if assigned. You collect a premium upfront. If the stock stays above the strike at expiration, the put expires worthless and you keep the premium as income. If the stock falls below the strike, you are obligated to buy shares at the strike price — but your effective cost basis is reduced by the premium collected.
The cash-secured put is the first leg of the Wheel Strategy. If assigned, you now own the shares — you then transition to selling covered calls against those shares (the second leg of the Wheel). This cycle can generate income repeatedly whether the stock rises, falls, or stays flat. The Wheel works best on quality stocks you are willing to own long-term.
Maximum profit is the premium collected, realized when the stock closes above the put strike at expiration. The risk is equivalent to owning the stock — if the stock falls to zero, your loss equals the strike price minus the premium received. This is why cash-secured puts are best sold on stocks you would be comfortable owning at the strike price.
The ideal underlying is a stock you are bullish on long-term and would be comfortable owning at the strike price. High-quality, liquid stocks with elevated implied volatility are ideal — IV drives premium higher, giving you a better risk/reward. Avoid selling puts on stocks with upcoming catalysts (earnings, FDA decisions) unless you specifically want to trade the volatility event.
Both strategies collect premium and have similar risk profiles. A cash-secured put profits when the stock stays above the put strike, while a covered call profits when the stock stays below the call strike. The cash-secured put requires holding cash as collateral; the covered call requires owning shares. In terms of P&L, a cash-secured put on stock XYZ at $100 strike is equivalent to selling an ATM covered call on XYZ (put-call parity).
Finally have an excuse to call yourself a quant trader. Because that's what you'll be.