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Using Covered Writing to Enhance Returns By Len Yates
– President, OptionVue Systems International.
Many traders use
covered writing to enhance the returns from their long stock
portfolios. A covered write is the sale of a call option “against”,
or “covered by”, a long position in the underlying. When you sell calls against your
stocks, you are giving someone the option of buying your stock from you
any time during the life of the option for a stated price -- the strike
price -- of the option. In
return for giving up all possible gains above the strike price you receive
cash for the options you sold.
Option sellers are
said to be "writing" options because they, conceptually, originate the
contract(s). (Not that
anybody ever sees actual paper contracts.)
When someone tells
me they don't trade options because options are too risky, I usually cite
the covered write as an example of using options to reduce
risk. And it's true. The sale of covered calls reduces
the risk of a stock portfolio in the sense that returns are not as
variable. In theoretical
terms, you have reduced your portfolio's variance. And returns are enhanced if stock
prices remain the same or fall. However, your calls
do nothing to protect you against losses as the market falls. This is the only "knock" on
covered writing --- that it takes away your upside and leaves you with the
same downside risk as a regular stockholder. That's true in
theory, but we have clients who manage to keep some of their upside
potential through careful management of their positions. How? By rolling. After a stock moves up, they
re-purchase the short calls (at a loss) and sell new calls at a higher
strike. This allows them to
stay in an up-trending stock so that capital gains (from the sale of the
stock) are deferred. Note
that losses from re-purchasing the short options can be claimed
immediately. The other smart
thing these clients do is sell when options are expensive. Option prices fluctuate between
periods when they are cheap or dear.
If you focus on selling when options are expensive, it can make a
big difference! Options
trading software can help you know when a stock's options are cheap or
dear on a historical basis.
At the time of this
writing, Cooper Industries' options were expensive. An analysis shows some excellent
potential returns from selling just out-of-the-money calls. Next
time we'll discuss a variation on the covered write strategy, called a
covered combo, that gives the investor true downside protection.
* Option strategies carry inherent risk of large potential
losses. As such, these strategies may not be suited to every
investor. |