Stock covered calls are a technique use by stock market investors to generate additional income from stocks that they already own in their investment portfolios. While options trading may sound scary, this technique for generating income is actually so conservative that most brokers will even let you utilize this technique in your online Individual Retirement Account (IRA).
A call option gives the buyer the right to buy a pre-determined quantity of an asset, usually a stock or commodity, at a specified price (strike price), on or before the expiration date of the option contract. A covered call option is a standard call option that the seller is covering with securities that are already owned in his trading account. Stock covered calls are merely standardized call options that are secured by the shares of stock that are already owned in the sellers trading account. Since each option contract represents 100 shares of stock, these covered option calls can only be sold (also known as writing a call option) based on full 100 share increments of the underlying stock that the option is being written against. For example, if an investor holds 670 shares of Cisco Systems (CSCO) in their account, they would be able to write (or sell) 6 stock covered calls.
Now that we’ve gone over what stock covered calls are, lets look at how to use them. Lets continue with the example of the investor with 670 shares of CSCO in their stock market investing account. Since CSCO does not pay a dividend, and the investor wants income without having to sell his stock, he decides to sell call options that will expire in two months, for a price that is above todays stock price for CSCO. In return for this option, the investor gets $1 per share, or $100 per covered option calls contract, times 6 contracts equals $600. This cash is deposited directly into the investors trading account, and can be used for whatever purpose the investor chooses. The investor is now obligated to sell the contract holder 600 shares of stock at the price specified in the contract, on or before the expiration date of the contract.
Now if the stock price does not go above the contract strike price, the investor who sold the option contracts keeps his stock, and the cash he got from selling the stock covered calls, and can do it all over again on the trading day after the contract expires. This is a very powerful concept, since it means that the investor can generate income multiple times per year by selling these call options.
If the stock closes above the price specified in the contract, usually around the date the contract expires, the contract will be exercised by the option holder, and the investor will have to sell him the 600 shares of CSCO at the price specified in the option contract. Since the contract price is above the price that the stock was trading at when the options were sold, the investor gets that capital gain profit, plus the cash that he was paid for selling the options.
While stock covered calls may seem a little complicated at first, in the end they provide you with a relatively easy way to generate cash flow on stocks that would otherwise just be sitting in your investment account.