As Equities Stall, Covered Call ETFs Can Offer Stable Returns

 | Sep 09, 2020 10:03AM ET

As broader markets like the S&P 500 and NASDAQ have been giving up some of their recent gains, market participants are in search of stable yields. One such niche area that has been picking up interest: covered call ETFs.

Here, we'll delve into the covered call space and introduce a fund worth considering:  

h2 Dynamics Of Call Options/h2

Although defining various options strategies with call and put options is beyond this article's scope, it'd be essential to appreciate the basics of a call option.  In this post, we'll address equities and index options.

A "call option," or "call" is a contract between the buyer (owner) and the seller (writer) of an option. It provides the owner the right to buy a stock—or another underlying asset—at a specified price during a fixed period stipulated in the option contract. 

Options are only good for a set period, so the buyer has the right, but not the obligation, to buy (or "call away") an agreed quantity of an underlying stock at the strike price from the option writer until the expiration date.

Single stock options can have a range of expiry dates. The most common is the monthly-expiry on the third Friday of a given month, but many have weekly options that expire each Friday. The further the date goes out in time, the more an option would typically be worth. Unlike index options, single stock options can be exercised before expiry.

Option buyers have to pay a certain amount of "premium'' to option writers, so sellers are typically motivated by this premium or income.

h2 What Is A Covered Call?/h2

One option contract typically represents 100 shares of a given stock. If the writer owns the underlying security or part of it (has a long position), the call option is called a ''covered call.'' To run a covered call strategy, an investor must own 100 shares for every call contract s/he plans to sell.

If the investor simultaneously buys 100 shares of a stock and writes a call option against that stock position, it is known as a "buy-write" transaction.

When an investor writes a covered call, that investor sells someone else the right to purchase 100 shares of the stock that the investor already owns, at a specific price, within a specified timeframe.

Put another way, a covered call is a hedged strategy as the writer is in a position to deliver the stock if it is called. 

h2 NASDAQ 100 Covered Call ETF/h2
  • Current Price: $21.25
  • 52-Week Range: $17.22 - 24.18
  • 30-Day Sec Yield: 0.28%
  • Distribution Yield (12-Month Trailing): 11.38%
  • Net Expense Ratio: 0.60 % per year, or $60 on a $10,000 investment

The NASDAQ 100 Covered Call ETF (NASDAQ:QYLD) follows a covered call” or buy-write” strategy, whereby it buys all the stocks in the NASDAQ 100, an index previously covered. QYLD writes” or sells” monthly at-the-money index call options. 

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