A reader left an interesting comment on this week's Striking Price column in Barron's. The article was about SpaceX. The reader said he sold deep in the money calls against the stock, really deep at $110, he didn't say where the common was when he put the trade on. Despite being that deep in the money, there was a ton of time premium in the price of the option.
Usually when there are calls that are that far deep in the money, there isn't much time premium (time premium is where changes in volatility are reflected) because the odds of the stock cutting in half or whatever are very remote.
With markets closed it is easy to take a look at where the stock and a couple of options are pricing without it being completely different 10 minutes from now. On Friday at 4pm, SPCX common closed at $185.00. The January 100 call was bid at $90.90 so the time premium was $5.90. With something like this you could compare $5.90 to how much interest you might get on the $9410 you'd need to put this on as a buywrite. That annualizes out to a "yield" of almost 11%.
The trade runs into problems if the common drops below $94.10 ($100 minus the time premium taken in). If SpaceX drops to $110 or $120, the buywrite would still intact and be profitable when the option expires, the call sold gives up everything that happens above the strike price. You might be sweating it, if the common was at $110 or $120 next month, you'd still have a long time to go. The reader called his strategy "conservative." He believes he is avoiding the volatility in the stock prices but is benefitting from the options volatility.
Obviously, there is no way to know what will happen to SpaceX' price between now and the January expiration but to the title of this post, the options market doesn't give money away. I take the time premium in our example to mean that the market thinks the stock could go below $100 between now and January.
If it works out, then the reader did a great job of exploiting SpaceX' volatility but either way it's a fascinating trade.
The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.