Dividends and After-Hour News Causing Exercise of OTM Call Strikes: A Real-Life Example with Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSE: XLF) – June 1, 2021
On December 21, 2020, Donna shared with me a successful trade she executed with XLF. What made this trade interesting was that the option was exercised after expiration when the strike closed out-of-the-money. This article will examine the reasons for this unusual circumstance.
Donna’s trade
- 11/24/2020: Buy 300 x XLF at $28.59
- 11/24/2020: STO 3 x 12/18/2020 $29.00 calls at $0.50
- 12/18/2020 (expiration Friday): XLF trading at $28.52
- 12/18/2020: Since the strike was OTM, no rolling action was executed
- 12/18/2020: After-hours, XLF moved up to $29.63
- 12/19/2020: The 3 contracts were exercised and Donna’s shares were sold at $29.00
Initial trade structuring on 11/24/2020
The initial time-value return on the option (ROO) was 1.7% with an additional 1.4% of upside potential for a total 24-day maximum return of 3.1%. That max return was realized when the shares were sold after contract expiration.
5-day chart around contract expiration
Red circle: Contracts expire at 4 PM Et on 12/18/2020- Green arrow: Price moves up at market open on Monday but never reaches the $29.00 previous strike price
- Purple circle: Price reaches as high as $28.85 before declining
2 explanations
1.After-hours news: Informal news about naming Janet Yellen as the new Treasury Secretary was initially met favorably by the financial community. Market-makers have until 5:30 PM ET to notify the OCC about exercising options.
2. XLF had an ex-dividend date on Monday 12/21/2020 making Friday 12/18/2020 a potential target for exercise. In general, the trading date prior to the ex-date is the most likely candidate for early exercise. Donna did not capture the $0.15 per-share dividend but did enjoy a hugely successful covered call trade.
Author: Alan Ellman