You want to generate cash flow by selling puts more than calls. Why, you ask? Two reasons:
First, stocks tend to rise over time, not fall. And selling puts is bullish; selling calls is bearish.
Second, puts offer more premium than calls due to volatility skew.
You have two ways to sell puts for cash flow.
First, sell naked puts
Second, sell bull put spreads.
Today’s video helps you better choose between naked puts and bull puts. Moreover, it investigates whether it’s better to sell multiple narrow spreads (e.g., sell two $5-wide spreads) or a single wider spread (e.g., sell one $10-wide spread).
Enjoy! I bet you’ll learn something new.
NOTES
Topic One: Naked Put vs. Bull Put?
Topic Two: Bull put. Do more narrow spreads ($3-wide) or less wide spreads ($9-wide)?
3 $3-wide bull puts vs. 1 $9-wide bull put
Here’s what I think I think about naked put vs. bull put
- In a larger account I care more about the DOLLAR RETURN than the ROI: NAKED PUT!
- Naked put pays $100 but costs $1,000 & a bull put pays $50 but only costs $400.
- Naked put ROI = 10%, DOLLAR RETURN $100
- Bull put ROI = 12.5%, DOLLAR RETURN $50
- Why not do 2 bull puts for $100, ROI = 12.5% b/c you made $100 on $800 instead of $100 on $1,000.
- Doing multiple bull puts vs. a single naked put INCREASES your LEVERAGE and THUS your RISK.
- Naked put pays $100 but costs $1,000 & a bull put pays $50 but only costs $400.
- In a smaller account I care more about the ROI than the DOLLAR RETURN
- Naked puts may require too much capital. Might take too much of the account.
- Capital-conscious.
- You will prefer a bull put over a naked put to control the cost.
Example $100 stock
Sell (1) $90 naked put for $1.00, cost is $1,000
Sell (2) $90/$85 bull puts for 50 cents apiece ($1.00 total), cost is $900 = Same DOLLAR RETURN, better ROI
Assume the stock falls to $85.
Naked put loss: $4
Bull Put loss: $9
GOOGL @ $108
$5-wide bull put: Sell Jun 97/92 bull put for 52 cents, Risk $448, ROI = 11.6%
$10-wide bull put: Sell Jun 97/87 bull put for 82 cents, Risk $918, ROI = 8.9%
Takeaway 1) The wider spread will have a higher DOLLAR RETURN but a lower ROI.
Why not do (2) $5-wide spreads? $1.04 credit on $8.96 cost, ROI = 11.6%
Takeaway 2) It seems like multiple narrow spreads is better b/c a) maintains the superior ROI and b) pays same if not more than a single wider spread.
BUT, you aren’t getting something for nothing. Doing multiple narrow spreads carries more leverage/risk than a single wider spread.
2 $97/$92 bull puts will lose MORE MONEY than 1 $97/$87.
Tyler’s order of preference:
- Naked Put
- Wider bull put
- Narrower bull put
- Multiple narrow bull puts (most leverage)
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