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84 Part II: Call Option Strategies
Example: An investor previously entered a covered writing situation in which he
wrote five January 30 calls against 500 XYZ common. The following prices exist cur­
rently, l month before expiration:
XYZ common, 29¼;
January 30 call,¼; and
April 30 call, 2¼.
The writer can only make ¼ a point more of time premium on this covered write for
the time remaining until expiration. It is possible that his money could be put to bet­
ter use by rolling forward to the April 30 call. Commissions for rolling forward must
be subtracted from the April 30's premium to present a true comparison.
By remaining in the January 30, the writer could make, at most, $250 for the 30
days remaining until January expiration. This is a return of $8.33 per day. The com­
missions for rolling forward would be approximately $100, including both the buy­
back and the new sale. Since the current time premium in the April 30 call is $250
per option, this would mean that the writer would stand to make 5 times $250 less
the $100 in commissions during the 120-day period until April expiration; $1,150
divided by 120 days is $9.58 per day. Thus, the per-day return is higher from the April
30 than from the January 30, after commissions are included. The writer should roll
forward to the April 30 at this time.
Rolling forward, since it involves a positive cash flow ( that is, it is a credit trans­
action) simultaneously increases the writer's maximum profit potential and lowers the
break-even point. In the example above, the credit for rolling forward is 2 points, so
the break-even point will be lowered by 2 points and the maximum profit potential
is also increased by the 2-point credit.
A simple calculator can provide one with the return-per-day calculation neces­
sary to make the decision concerning rolling forward. The preceding analysis is only
directly applicable to rolling forward at the same striking price. Rolling-up or rolling­
down decisions at expiration, since they involve different striking prices, cannot be
based solely on the differential returns in time premium values offered by the options
in question.
In the earlier discussion concerning rolling up, it was mentioned that at or near
expiration, one may have no choice but to write the next higher striking price if he
wants to retain his stock. This does not necessarily involve a debit transaction, how­
ever. If the stock is volatile enough, one might even be able to roll up for even money
or a slight credit at expiration. Should this occur, it would be a desirable situation and
should always be taken advantage of.