Dividend stocks are valuable for investors looking for income. Yet sometimes, you want to own a stock that doesn't pay a dividend, especially if you want maximum exposure to a fast-growing upstart that doesn't yet have the excess capital to return to shareholders in the form of dividends. If you need to generate income from all of your stock holdings, you might think that high-growth stocks are essentially off-limits.
Yet there's a strategy you can use to generate income even from stocks that don't pay any dividends. The strategy involves options, which many investors see as risky. Yet used correctly, options techniques don't always increase risk levels, and this one in particular can help serve a valuable need while letting you own the stocks you truly want to hold in your portfolio.
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The basics of covered calls
The covered call strategy can help produce income from a stock position that you own. In order to implement the covered call strategy, you need two things: shares of stock, and the ability to write a call option against those shares. A call option gives the buyer the right, without any obligation, to purchase a set number of shares at a pre-specified price between now and the expiration date of the option. The buyer pays a premium to the seller, and in exchange, the seller agrees to sell the shares to the buyer if the buyer exercises the option.
Here's an example of how the covered call strategy can work. Say you own 100 shares of stock worth $100 per share. The stock pays no dividend, but you want income. You could write a covered call agreeing to sell your stock to the call option buyer for $120 per share anytime in the next three months. In exchange, you'd receive a certain amount of money per share up front. Regardless of what happens with the option, that money is yours to keep.
2 outcomes with covered calls
Each time you use the covered call strategy, it can end in one of two different ways. If the share price stays below the agreed-upon price in the option -- also known as the strike price -- then the option buyer won't want to exercise the option. It would be cheaper simply to purchase shares at a lower price on the open market, and so the option will expire worthless. You'll simply get to keep the option premium you received when you first wrote the covered call.
If the share price rises above the strike price, however, the option buyer will exercise the option. You'll be obligated to sell your shares for the agreed-upon price, even though you'd be able to get more if you just sold the shares on the open market.