Buy-Write Strategies on Individual Stocks

Components Performance/Risk
Period Return
49.9%
Return Rank
Strong
Risk Exposure
Average Risk

ETF-based option strategies are linked to long positions in a single stock, purportedly to generate additional income with the sale of options - by 'writing' calls on the underlying asset itself or on a synthetic replication of its price movements 

The sale (writing) of in-the-money calls is a popular strategy marketed "to generate income" but accounting in effect for a risk premium as the seller takes on volatility from the option buyer

The drivers of such 'enhanced income strategies' blend the equity risk premium for holding long asset positions (or their synthetic replication) and the volatility risk premium rewarding the option sale

Consequently, covered call strategies will have a favorable outcome in less volatile, sideways moving markets, when the option-leg expires without hitting the strike price

Without the benefit of a diversified investment in a pool of assets, covered calls on single equities are exposed negatively 

  • to a falling price trend - since the option strategy provides no downside protection
  • to high volatility - relative to the option's implied volatility - making the risk premium unprofitable

As shown on the performance / volatility chart, the reverse is true

  • with stock prices trending up, harvest the upside - within limits set by the call strike price,
  • favoring below average share price volatility 

 

For deeper insights, rank the fund selection by performance or by volatility for the selected time period

Over time, fund price momentum signals trends of the last 5 days against a 20-day average

For comparison, select various time frames in the top right menu box, from 2 weeks to a full year (performance of some very recently listed ETFs may not be significant for lack of price data)

Performance History
Components Performance/Risk
Weights by Sub Category
Sub Category Performance/Risk