Worst Case Scenario in Covered Call trading

This thread is all the Cialis that I need. The OP thinks he's discovered the wheel and doesn't understand basic synthetics. Where's the FreePut?
Why should I disclose this finding to such a person like you, or anybody else? :) Just keep & stay frustrated! :)
 
I like to keep this simple. The "worst case scenario" for a Covered Call is the stock going to $0.00. Call premiums do not offset most downward slides in stocks. I have posted this before. I'm not a fan of Buy-Writes in general of single stock names. You take the time and effort to pick a winner, (A symbol you expect will outperform the market and other stocks), but you cap your gains by selling a call that does not really protect your downside. It only offers a small offset toward losses if you are wrong.

if someone owns shares of stock and wants to protect their downside there's something they can use for that. it's called a put. and they buy it not sell it.
 
if someone owns shares of stock and wants to protect their downside there's something they can use for that. it's called a put. and they buy it not sell it.
That's a very expensive and the worst strategy, IMO :-)
 
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