Ep63 - Poor Man’s Covered Calls

Ep63 - Poor Man’s Covered Calls

Understanding the Poor Man's Covered Call

Introduction to Options and Risk Management

  • The concept of "less downside risk" is introduced, emphasizing that when buying a call option, the maximum loss is limited to the premium paid for it.
  • A built-in put feature exists within this trade due to time value associated with options. This aspect will be elaborated throughout the discussion.

Announcement of New Book Release

  • Host Dan Passarelli announces his book titled Build Consistent Wealth with Options, set for release on April 28th. He expresses excitement about sharing years of trading strategies in this work.
  • The author aims to provide comprehensive insights into covered calls and cash-secured puts without holding back valuable information, unlike many authors who keep their best strategies secret.

Special Offers for Listeners

  • Listeners are encouraged to visit bbcwoo.com for updates on the book release and special bonuses related to its launch. They can also subscribe as an all-in wealth builder for additional resources and benefits, including webinars and coaching classes.
  • An autographed copy of the new book will be sent to subscribers as part of their membership benefits, enhancing engagement with the audience.

Exploring Alternative Trading Strategies

Capital Efficiency in Trading

  • Traditional wheel trades require significant capital investment; however, alternatives like poor man's covered calls allow traders to engage with less capital while still achieving similar outcomes.

Definition of Poor Man's Covered Call

  • The poor man's covered call is defined as a diagonal call spread where a trader buys a longer-term in-the-money call option while selling a shorter-term out-of-the-money call option, providing a cost-effective proxy for stock ownership.

Mechanics of Diagonal Call Spreads

Structure of Diagonal Call Spreads

  • A diagonal call spread combines elements from both vertical spreads (same expiration but different strike prices) and horizontal spreads (same strike price but different expirations). This strategy allows flexibility in managing positions based on market conditions.

Benefits Over Traditional Methods

  • By utilizing long calls instead of directly purchasing stocks, traders can reduce costs significantly while maintaining exposure to potential upside movements in stock prices through strategic options management.

Risk Considerations and Trade Management

Understanding Risks Involved

  • While there’s less risk due to lower capital investment when using long calls, there are unique risks associated with short calls that need careful management since they are not fully covered by underlying stock ownership like traditional covered calls would be.

Key Setup Criteria for Trades

  • Successful execution requires understanding delta (price sensitivity), theta (time decay), and vega (volatility sensitivity). These Greeks play crucial roles in determining optimal entry points and managing ongoing trades effectively over time.

Managing Implied Volatility

Impact of Market Conditions

  • High implied volatility often occurs after significant stock declines; thus, selecting options during these periods can enhance profitability by allowing traders to capitalize on inflated premiums from short-term options sold against longer-term positions bought at lower volatility levels.

Example Scenario

  • An example illustrates how one might structure trades around specific stock price movements using various strikes based on technical analysis or fundamental evaluations—highlighting practical applications of discussed concepts.

Conclusion: Final Thoughts on Strategy Implementation

Recap & Encouragement

  • Dan wraps up by encouraging listeners not only to purchase his new book but also emphasizes engaging actively through subscriptions that offer further learning opportunities about wealth building via options trading strategies.

Closing Remarks

  • He reminds listeners about the importance of managing trades proactively while being prepared for unexpected market shifts that could impact their positions negatively or positively depending on how well they adapt their strategies accordingly.
Video description

Dan breaks down the poor man’s covered call, a strategy that uses a longer-term in-the-money call instead of stock, paired with a shorter-term out-of-the-money call sold against it. The result is a capital-efficient alternative to a traditional covered call, with less downside exposure but its own tradeoffs in time decay, volatility and assignment risk. Dan explains how to set these trades up, what greeks matter most, and how to manage and roll them effectively. Key Topics • What a poor man’s covered call is and why traders use it • How a diagonal call spread mimics a covered call with less capital • Why the long in-the-money call acts as a stock proxy • The built-in downside protection of owning a call instead of stock • How time value creates both protection cost and opportunity • Why these setups can work especially well after a stock has fallen sharply • The role of delta, theta and vega in building the trade • Why positive theta is essential to making the strategy work • Using resistance and skate-objective thinking for the short call • How to manage the trade by rolling the short call up and out • Why assignment on the short call should be avoided • When to exit the entire trade instead of continuing to roll Key Takeaways • A poor man’s covered call is not really a covered call. It’s a diagonal spread that behaves similarly, but the short call is not actually covered by stock. • The long call reduces capital requirements. That makes the strategy useful for smaller accounts or for traders who want to deploy less cash. • Downside risk is limited. Since you own a call instead of stock, the maximum loss is what you paid for the long call. • The long call also has a cost. Its time value acts like the price paid for that built-in protection. • Theta is the engine. The strategy works best when the short call decays faster than the long call, producing net positive theta. • Strike selection matters a lot. The long strike controls delta; the short strike must balance premium, theta and room for the stock to rise. • Resistance helps with the short call. Since this is always a skate-objective trade, technical analysis matters for choosing a short strike the stock is less likely to breach. • Management is active. Ideally, the stock rises toward but not through the short strike, allowing repeated roll-ups and more premium collection. • Avoid short-call assignment. If the short call moves in the money, action is usually needed because there is no stock to deliver. • This is more of a trade than an investment. If the stock behaves differently than expected, it may make more sense to exit than to keep adjusting.  Connect • Learn more about host Dan Passarelli and Market Taker Mentoring: MarketTaker.com (http://markettaker.com) • Get exclusive content including video trade walk-throughs, Dan's actual trades, monthly AMA webinars and more: wealthbuildingpodcast.com (http://wealthbuildingpodcast.com) • Subscribe on your preferred platform and leave a review to help more traders discover the show. Disclosure: Options involve risk and are not suitable for all investors. Prior to buying or selling an option, investors must read Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options (ODD) which can be found at https://www.theocc.com/company-information/documents-and-archives/options-disclosure-document Don’t trade with money you are not prepared to lose. Anything discussed on this show is intended to be generalized information and not intended to be a recommendation to buy or sell any security. The host and guests are not familiar with listeners’ specific situations. For trading information relevant to your specific needs, speak with a licensed broker or advisor.   Trumpet Trumpet Fanfare by bevibeldesign -- https://freesound.org/s/350428/ -- License: Creative Commons 0 Wah Wah Wah Wah wah trumpet failed joke punch line.wav by Doctor_Jekyll -- https://freesound.org/s/240195/ -- License: Attribution 4.0 Dramatic Drum Roll dramatic drum roll.wav by ingsey101 -- https://freesound.org/s/51401/  -- License: Attribution 3.0