The Investment U e-Letter: Issue # 607 November 13, 2006 Selling Call Options: How To Instantly Turn Your Stocks Into Passive Income by Lee Lowell, Advisory Panelist, Investment U Editor's Note: Excerpts of this article were originally published in the November 10, 2006 issue of the Smart Options E-Report, from the editors at Mt. Vernon Research.
If you're an investor who's long on a stock right now, I want to show you how to make money by selling call options while you're waiting for the stock to move higher. At this very moment, there's another investor somewhere who's willing to pay you cash - today - in return for the opportunity to possibly take your stock from you at a higher price sometime in the future. That means you can start making passive income right now
all due to your having some shares sitting in your account. Here's how it works
Selling the "Rights" to Your Shares With Call Options If you own at least 100 shares of stock in your account, you have the opportunity to sell a covered call option against those shares. What does that mean? Basically, you can sell one call option (one option contract equals 100 shares) against the shares of the company you already own. In doing so, you're giving up the right to own the shares to the person who buys the option from you. So he now has the right to buy the shares from you at a pre-determined price (this is called the strike price) and at a pre-determined date (known as the expiration date). For that right, he must pay you money - yours to keep, free and clear, no matter what happens in the future. That's your return. If the stock moves up past the strike price of the option you sold, you will then be obligated to sell your shares of stock to the option buyer at the stated strike price. Is that a bad thing? Not if you do the trade correctly, and have a price in mind that you would be willing to sell the shares anyway. Let me give you a real-life example of how this covered call trade works
Turning IBM Into An Income Machine My parents both own 800 shares of IBM that they've held for many, many years. Over that time, they've obviously experienced the ups and downs, but have still not cashed out of the stock. But now they've finally decided that if they're going to sell their IBM shares, it's going to be when the stock is $95 or more. Fair enough. But instead of simply having them enter a sell order limit at $95, I got them to sell some covered calls against their 800 long shares at the $95 strike price instead. Since each option contract is the equivalent of 100 shares of stock, my parents sold 8 call option contracts each. Take a look at the IBM chart below: 
We sold the first set of call options on March 17, 2006 - selling the January 2007 $95 strike calls for $1.95 each. That brought in an immediate $3,120 (16 x $1.95 x $100 multiplier = $3,120) into my parents' accounts. We chose the $95 strike calls because if IBM ever happened to trade above $95 by option expiration in January 2007, my parents would get the stock called away from them at that price. So instead of sitting around, waiting and hoping for IBM to eventually move back up to $95, they got proactive with their portfolio, sold some calls and made easy cash. Obligation-Free Call Options Since you're never obligated to hold onto a call option, we decided to buy back the calls in the middle of July 2006 in order to take a profit on the option side of the trade. Even though IBM was moving down in price (and causing a paper loss on my parents' long stock), the call options were getting cheaper too, giving us a gain on those. We bought all the calls back for $0.15 each, which cost us $240 total (16 x $0.15 x $100 multiplier = $240). So in essence, we locked in a real-life gain of $2,880 ($3120 - $240 = $2,880). Sweet! Since we bought the options back, we were left with no more obligation to sell IBM at $95/share. My parents had their 1,600 shares of IBM just sitting in their account again. And we waited for the next chance to sell a covered call
Using Call Options to Deposit Another $4,800 Into the Account The next opportunity occurred about three months later, after IBM gapped up to $92 per share on October 18, 2006. Because IBM had rallied back $18 a share, it was a good time for selling more call options. My parents opted to sell the April 2007 $95 calls this time, and they collected $3 per option, which brought in another $4,800 of fast, easy money. All they have to do now is sit and wait to see if IBM gets to, and then stays above, $95 per share by the April 2007 option expiration. If that happens, they will sell their shares for $95. If IBM stays below $95 at April expiration, the calls will expire - and my parents will keep their IBM shares and will look to do another trade sometime in the future. The covered call strategy is a sound and easy way to bring in extra cash every few months. If you have stock sitting idle in your account, and have a pre-determined sell point, don't just wait for the stock to reach that level, sell call options against your stock at a strike price that coincides with your sell point. Make your stocks work for you, instead of you working for your stocks. Good trading,
Lee Lowell Today's Crib Sheet - Selling call options is a great way to generate income in your brokerage account. Buying them can also be extremely profitable, especially if you have time on your side.
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