Here was the exact scenario:
ROKU was trading at $98.5-99.25 at the time I brought it up. The $98 strike puts, that expire on Friday, we're going for $8/ per contract. I suggested selling the puts for the $8 premium. I was confident that they'd beat earnings, which they did today, thus sending the stock above $98 at the time of expiration, hence the "free money" comment. If the stock didn't beat earnings and was below $98 your effective cost basis would have been $90 per share. Since Roku will be above $98 in 48 hours you would have made a free $800 per contract put you sold. I hope that explains it better.
ETA: After re-reading your post, I shouldn't have used the word "naked". Sometimes wrong words are used when the market is open and you're processing different strategies at the same time. Apologies.
ROKU was trading at $98.5-99.25 at the time I brought it up. The $98 strike puts, that expire on Friday, we're going for $8/ per contract. I suggested selling the puts for the $8 premium. I was confident that they'd beat earnings, which they did today, thus sending the stock above $98 at the time of expiration, hence the "free money" comment. If the stock didn't beat earnings and was below $98 your effective cost basis would have been $90 per share. Since Roku will be above $98 in 48 hours you would have made a free $800 per contract put you sold. I hope that explains it better.
ETA: After re-reading your post, I shouldn't have used the word "naked". Sometimes wrong words are used when the market is open and you're processing different strategies at the same time. Apologies.