A covered put involves being short 100 shares of stock and selling a put option against that short position. You collect premium upfront in exchange for agreeing to buy back the shares at the strike price if the stock falls below it. This generates income on stocks you're already short.
Quick Stats:
Component 1: Short 100 shares of stock (borrowed and sold)
Component 2: Sell 1 put option against that short position
You collect premium immediately. If stock stays above strike, keep premium and remain short. If stock drops below strike, shares get put to you (you buy back at strike).
ComponentExampleAmountShort 100 shares@ $100/share+$10,000Sell $95 put+$2.00 premium+$200Total Premium$200Max ProfitIf put assigned$700Breakeven$102
Max profit: ($100 - $95) × 100 + $200 = $700 if shares bought back at $95
Requirements:
Example:
Important: Short selling carries unlimited risk if stock rises.
Out-of-the-Money (OTM):
At-the-Money (ATM):
In-the-Money (ITM):
Strike SelectionStock PriceStrikePremiumAssignment RiskITM$100$105$7.00Very HighATM$100$100$3.50MediumOTM$100$95$1.50LowerFar OTM$100$90$0.50Very Low
Most common: Sell puts 5-10% OTM for income while keeping downside potential.
Recommended: 30-45 days for balance between premium and flexibility.
Formula: (Short Entry Price - Strike) + Premium Received
Example:
Occurs when: Stock closes at or below strike at expiration and shares bought back via assignment.
Formula: Unlimited (stock can rise infinitely)
Example:
Reality: Unlimited loss potential makes this a high-risk strategy.
Formula: Short entry price + premium received
Example:
Stock can rise to $102 and you still break even (premium offsets $2 loss on short).
Setup: Overvalued Tech Stock
Trade:
Scenario 1: Stock Stays Above $75
Scenario 2: Stock Drops to $70, Put Assigned
Result: Either generate income on short or close position at target with bonus premium.
Covered puts have less negative delta than being short stock alone.
Example:
Meaning: Below $95, you only capture 70% of downward moves due to short put.
The advantage: Theta works for you on the short put.
Example:
Impact: You're short options, so falling IV helps.
Buy back profitable puts before expiration to reset position.
Profit Target Guidelines:
Example:
Why exit early? Free up short position, reduce assignment risk.
If stock drops past your strike but you want to stay short:
How to Roll:
Example:
Result: Keep short position, lower strike, additional income.
If stock closes below strike at expiration:
What happens:
Example:
After assignment: Re-short shares if still bearish, or move to new opportunity.
FactorCovered PutCovered CallUnderlying PositionShort stockLong stockRisk ProfileUnlimited upside riskLimited downside riskMarket OutlookBearishBullishComplexityAdvancedBeginnerMargin RequiredYes (short stock)No (own stock)Assignment OutcomeBuy back shares (close short)Sell shares
Use covered put when: Experienced with shorting, bearish outlook, want income on short
Use covered call when: Own stock long, bullish outlook, simpler strategy
Covered puts are part of the "Reverse Wheel" - opposite of regular Wheel:
Step 1: Sell cash-secured call
Step 2: Sell covered put
Step 3a: Put assigned → Short covered, back to Step 1
Step 3b: Put expires → Sell another put
Result: Perpetual income whether you're short or flat.
Unlimited Risk:
Complexity:
Limited Upside:
Better Alternatives:
Only use covered puts if:
Unlike long stock (limited to stock going to $0), short stock has no cap:
What happens:
Famous examples: GameStop 2021, Volkswagen 2008
Short seller pays dividends:
Borrowing costs:
Maximum allocation: No more than 10-20% of portfolio in short positions (covered puts included)
Example:
Risk management critical: Short positions can spiral out of control.
❌ "Great premium!" but can't afford assignment
✅ Forced to cover at worst time, blown account
Fix: Only sell covered puts if you can afford to buy back shares
❌ Collect $500 but cap all downside
✅ Stock crashes 30%, make only $500
Fix: Sell 5-10% OTM to keep downside participation
❌ Stock squeezes 50%, no exit plan
✅ Massive losses, margin call
Fix: Always have stop loss on short stock position
❌ Short into earnings, stock gaps up 20%
✅ Catastrophic loss
Fix: Cover shorts before major catalysts or earnings
❌ Short stock pays $2 dividend
✅ Owe $200 per 100 shares
Fix: Track ex-dividend dates, factor into cost
Premium collected:
Short stock gain/loss:
Dividend payments:
Consult tax professional for specific guidance.
Before selling any covered put:
✅ Currently short 100 shares (or multiples of 100)
✅ Willing to buy back shares at strike price
✅ Strike selected 5-10% OTM for income
✅ IV Rank >30 for decent premiums
✅ Expiration 30-45 DTE
✅ No earnings or major catalysts before expiration
✅ Exit plan at 50% profit
✅ Stop loss on short stock position (critical!)
✅ Understand assignment means covering short
✅ Adequate margin and capital for short position
A covered put involves being short 100 shares of stock and simultaneously selling a put option against that short stock position. The short shares provide 'coverage' for the short put obligation — if the put is exercised, you use your existing short shares to fulfill the assignment. You collect the put premium upfront and profit when the stock falls below the put strike.
A covered call is a bullish/neutral strategy (long stock + short call), capping upside in exchange for income. A covered put is a bearish/neutral strategy (short stock + short put), capping downside profit in exchange for income. Covered puts profit when the stock falls, while covered calls profit when the stock stays flat or rises. Both cap potential profit on their respective directional move.
Maximum profit = (short stock price − short put strike) + premium collected, realized when the stock falls to or below the put strike at expiration. For example: short stock at $100, sell $95 put for $3 → max profit = ($100 − $95) + $3 = $8 per share if stock closes at or below $95.
Breakeven = short stock price + premium collected. For example: short stock at $100, collect $3 put premium → breakeven = $100 + $3 = $103. The stock must stay below $103 for the position to be profitable overall. Above $103, the short stock losses exceed the premium collected.
Covered puts are rare and typically used by sophisticated traders who already have a short stock position and want to collect premium income while the stock drifts lower. They are also used to potentially close the short stock position at a favorable price — if the short put is assigned, you buy shares at the put strike, which closes out the short position. The strategy requires a margin account and carries the substantial risk of the short stock position if the stock rallies.
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