Say you bought 2 of the calls at $0.20 each. You could sell one at $0.40 to get all of your original capital back and still have the one remaining call as a runner.
you say that now, but things can change quickly in a heartbeat with these meme driven stocks.ClutchCityAg said:I was just able to get .19 on an OCT $4 Covered call... feels like free moneyRigsTx said:
There is a wall at $1.15 for SNDL.
The 6/18 30p that I bought for $5.20 at $38 equity, is now $5.80 at $62 equity.CrazyRichAggie said:
MIL texted me said she just bought some AMC. Probably time to get out.
McInnis 03 said:
Loading up on some NAKD, could go nutty AH....
Kind of mad I didn't buy in the $3s while I was thinking about it.... but when OA pounds the table I pound buy!BubbleBoyB said:
Tell us OA!!
BubbleBoyB said:
Tell us OA!!
Bed Bath and BananasMcInnis 03 said:
Bed Bath and Bonkers.
Worried about the moonshot as well, but just bought some cheap $1 and $1.5 calls for 6/11 an 6/18.RenoAg said:
Ended up buying back all of my SNDL 6/11 $1 covered calls and sold 1/21/22 $7 on a third of them. Made a tiny bit more premium per contract. Figured I might as well leave myself room for some crazy upside. I doubt it gets to $7/share. Wanted to keep some shares available to sell at any time and not tied up as collateral. I'm too heavily weighted in SNDL. But in this environment I have more FOMO on a moonshot.
6% for me. And net free on almost all the calls I bought over the last couple of weeks, most of them out to December or January.Philip J Fry said:
Solid 5% gain today. Wiped out my losses for the year.
Unidentified hedge fund: pic.twitter.com/4t0cnXl9go
— Walter Deemer (@WalterDeemer) January 27, 2021
Awesome, thank you guys. I appreciate it.Prophet00 said:
You are correct. If at expiration, the stock price is at or below $2, then the buyer can exercise that option and you have to buy the shares at $2.
Your cost basis for those shares will be $2 minus the $.35 premium, or $1.65/share.
The big thing you need to consider is that your trading company will hold the capital required to buy the shares at $2 ($200) per contract, so you won't be able to utilize that capital for nearly 4 months.