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  • Game Plan When Our Cash-Secured Puts are Exercised – November 22, 2021

    When we sell cash-secured puts, we have selected a stock or ETF based on sound fundamental, technical and common-sense principles. We generally select out-of-the-money put strikes that meet our stated initial time-value return goal range. Once the trade is executed, we move to position management mode. This article will highlight the choices we have available should our cash-secured puts be exercised as our plan for this potential event must be in place prior to entering our trades.

    Real-life example with Etsy, Inc. (Nasdaq: ETSY)

    On expiration Friday, January 15, 2021, I had 2 x $205.00 ETSY cash-secured puts in place and the market declined significantly that day moving the original out-of-the-money put strike to in-the-money as 4 PM ET approached. ETSY was trading at $204.68. I could have closed the short put position thereby avoiding exercise and assignment of the shares. However, that was not part of my plan. Instead, I allowed assignment and, on the following day, 200 shares of ETSY were put to me at $205.00.

    200 Shares of ETSY Assigned on 1/16/2021

    Choices after assignment of cash-secured puts

    1- Retain shares as part of our buy-and-hold portfolio

    In scenario #1, we sell cash-secured puts to buy a stock at a discount instead of using limit orders. Since we are selling out-of-the-money puts, the breakeven price point is the put strike minus the put premium. The BCI put-selling calculators will generate this information.

    2. Write a covered call

    Scenario #2 is the PCP (put-call-put) strategy where our objectives are to generate premium cash-flow or buy a stock at a discount. If this were my objective, I could have sold in-the-money (defensive) or out-of-the-money (more aggressive) calls depending on the overall market assessment and personal risk-tolerance. All strike premiums should align with our initial time-value return goal range.

    3. Sell the stock if share price recovers

    Scenario #3 is an adjunct to scenario #1. ETSY, at the time of these trades was a security I would otherwise want to own for the longer-term. My plan, prior to entering the initial put sale, was, if exercised, retain the shares unless I could generate a substantial short-term profit.

    The final outcome

    On Monday, January 19, the market, along with ETSY, bounced back and I decided to sell the 200 shares at a net profit of $2529.00.

    ETSY Sold at a $2529.00 Profit

    Discussion

    Our entire plan for selling cash-secured puts must be in place prior to entering all trades. Stock and option selection will launch our trades and a detailed game plan for position management must be in place so that we can react in a non-emotional manner for every potential outcome.

    Author: Alan Ellman

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