Dow 30 Fund Yielding 6.4% And Trading At A Discount

 | Aug 04, 2021 05:08AM ET

As dividend yields and interest rates dropped in recent decades, income investors looked for ways to generate cash flow from stocks. Selling (“writing”) covered calls is one strategy that has gained attention.

It is certainly a conservative options strategy that most income investors think they should do. The math is compelling.

Here’s how it works. We would buy a dividend stock like Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM) for its $0.87 per share quarterly payout (a 6% yield). Then we would write a covered call with a “strike” price just above the stock’s current level.

For example, XOM trades below $60 as I write. A call seller may peddle the October 15 expiring call with a $60 strike price. This would sacrifice upside above $60 but, in return, bring about $1.75 in cash. That’s roughly two dividend payments for a two-and-a-half-month commitment—not bad!

The secret is the short timeline. Time works against the option buyer, but for the option seller. Call options “decay” in price—move towards zero—as they approach expiration, dropping off a cliff in the final 30 days: