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918 Part VI: Measuring and Trading Volatility
There is one further rule in connection with qualified calls. Recall that we stat­
ed that the above rules apply only if the stock is not yet held long-term when the call
is written. If the stock is already long-term when the call is written, then it is consid­
ered long-term when called away, regardless of the position of the striking price when
the call was written. However, if one sells an in-the-money call on stock already held
long-term, and then subsequently buys that call back at a loss, the loss on the call
must be taken as a long-term loss because the stock was long-term.
Overall, a rising market is the best, taxwise, for the covered call writer. If he
writes out-of-the-money calls and the stock rises, he could have a short-term loss on
the calls plus a long-term gain on the stock.
Example: On January 2nd of a particular year, an investor bought 100 shares of XYZ
at 32, paying $75 in commissions, and simultaneously wrote a July 35 call for 2 points.
The July 35 expired worthless, and the investor then wrote an October 35 call for 3
points. In October, with XYZ at 39, the investor bought back the October 35 call for
6 points (it was in-the-money) and sold a January 40 call for 4 points. In January, on
the expiration day, the stock was called away at 40. The investor would have a long­
term capital gain on his stock, because he had held it for more than one year. He
would also have two short-term capital transactions from the July 35 and October 35
calls. Tables 41-2 and 41-3 show his net tax treatment from operating this covered
writing strategy. The option commission on each trade was $25.
Things have indeed worked out quite well, both profit-wise and tax-wise, for this
covered call writer. Not only has he made a net profit of $850 from his transactions on
the stock and options over the period of one year, but he has received very favorable
tax treatment. He can take a short-term loss of $175 from the combined July and
October option transactions, and is able to take the $1,025 gain as a long-term gain.
TABLE 41-2.
Summary of trades.
January 2
July
October
January
Bought 100 XYZ at 32
Sold 1 July 35 call at 2
July call expired worthless (XYZ at 32)
Sold 1 October 35 call at 3
Bought back October 35 call for 6 points (XYZ at 39)
Sold 1 January 40 call for 4 points
(of the following year)
1 00 XYZ called away at 40