As the title says, I’d like to sell naked calls far OTM and cover them by buying the underlying if the price approaches the strike price so that they’re covered when ITM.
Why this strategy? If I have to buy the underlying I want it to be in an uptrend.
I don’t mind having it recalled if the calls are ITM, I’m here to only collect the premium. And if they actually become ITM and I bought the underlying a bit below there’ll be a little bit of profit there too.
If the price doesn’t hit the strike price and I’ll be left holding the underlying after the original calls expire, due to the uptrend it’s likely the current price won’t be far from the entry price, so either I can sell it for a profit or take a small loss or write covered calls near the entry price to get out of the position quickly and without a loss.
The risk obviously here is that if the price moves abruptly ITM I won’t be able to cover the naked calls with an entry price below the strike price.
Another risk would be that if the price of the underlying just collapses after I bought it I won’t be able to write those covered calls near the entry price.
Any feedback on this idea?
People usually do covered calls on shares that they already own so to have a bit of profit when the stock is in a temporary downtrend while waiting for the stock to turn around. If you were going to cover the short with stock, I would buy the stock at the same time when I short when the stock price is still low so that way there is no risk of not being able to cover due to the stock price potentially gapping up past the strike price. By the time that the short call is about to be ITM, the stock price has already appreciated so much so even if you were still able to buy the stock below the strike price the profit from the assignment would be much lower vs if you had bought the stock earlier when the price was lower. Why make a small profit when you can make a bigger profit on the underlying if the stock moved up?
If you never wanted to buy the stock and just wanted to short options for the premium, then might I suggest you to buy the call instead to turn the naked short into a spread. That way you have covered the naked short and you won't have to deal with the risk of buying the stock only to see the stock price turn south against you and you lose even more on longing the stock.
Anyway experiment a bit, do a small position and see how it works.
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