Quote from wartrace:
I just finished watching a seminar by Ross Jardine explaining how he writes calls against a long position in LEAPS. Anyone here use that strategy? It seems as if it would be a good way to generate steady income with little risk.
When people push their favorite methods - and especially when they charge a fee to teach those methods - they neglect the 'whole truth.'
Sure, this is a good method - but only when the markets are neutral to slightly bullish.
If the market heads sharply lower, a boost in implied volatility may reduce your losses, but the LEAPS option will decline in price by a MUCH LARGER amount than the call you sold.
If you are confidently bullish, you can use this method.
But there is one other risk that I have never seen anyone who recommends this method mention: If the stock undergoes a substantial rally - far beyond the strike price, this method can lose money. Yes, lose. First, the near-term option you sell reaches a delta of 100 and picks up value faster than the LEAPS. that alone costs money. second, a severe collapse in implied volatility reduces the value of your LEAPS, causing you to lose again.
This method is riskier than it appears. It is ueful in specific markets, but unless you are a good prognosticator, this is a strategy best avoided.
Mark
http://blog.mdwoptions.com/options_for_rookies/