Quote from TRYKtrading:
so at $4, am i writing the nov4C, the nov4P, or the 5s?
That depends on whether you seek more premium (neutral outlook) or more stock appreciation (bullish).
am i vertically spreading, or just selling the one or the other?
If you really don't know the difference, it would behoove you to learn what each strategy achieves.
First off, there's always downside risk on the stock. You may be bullish and be willing to accept it but it's always there.Quote from TRYKtrading:
but you can. by simply selling an OTM with only extrinsic value, you're locking in x% return per share every month, with no downside risk on the stock.
i've calculated it out the returns can be massive, and consistent, and compounding.
my point in bringing this up was to solicit other opinions, intelligent ones, so i could learn.

Quote from xflat2186:
As far as buying and holding C and doing the covered write to generate monthly income, it can work but IMO there are far superior stocks you could find to implement that strategy with. The nature of a 4 dollar stock is such that it will trade at a high IV but the premium in real dollars is not all that high.
I think you have a lot of that backwardsQuote from TRYKtrading:
i agree but i was using C as a longer term example, because i would likely look to higher strikes and much longer out expiry to take advantage of the time decay and minimise downside risk as the stock fluctuates. i'm thinking six months, a year, and writing the highest calls on the probability they will decrease in value at a higher rate than a closer ITM call.