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Back to strategy library Bullish · Income

Covered Call

The portfolio holder's income trade. Own the underlying, sell a higher-strike call, and earn premium while you wait for your thesis to play out.

MAX PROFIT(Strike − entry) + premium
MAX LOSSEntry − premium (stock to zero)
BREAK-EVENEntry price − premium
OUTLOOKSideways to mildly up
Stock entry 2,400 Short 2,500 CE BE 2,360 P&L Spot → Capped gain Stock drawdown

The thesis

A Covered Call is the most widely-used options strategy in Indian equities for a simple reason: it converts a slow-moving stock holding into a yield-bearing position. You hold the underlying shares (or futures), sell an OTM call against them, and collect the premium as additional income.

The structure is ideal for traders who are already long the stock and are willing to part with it at a specific higher price. Each monthly cycle, you're essentially renting out the upside tail in exchange for current cash.

It is not a free lunch. If the stock rallies sharply past the short strike, you've effectively sold your upside — the premium was paid for a reason. Done right, it's a disciplined income structure; done lazily, it's a recipe for watching winners run without you.

Construction

One long position in the underlying (shares or futures) plus one short OTM call, typically the near-month expiry at a strike 2-5% above spot.

ActionInstrumentStrike / PricePremium / Value
HoldReliance stock (say)Entry 2,400
SellReliance Call2,500 CE40
Net credit40 per share (= ₹10,000 per lot of 250)

When it works

When it fails

Greeks at entry

DELTAPositiveReduced vs naked long
THETAPositiveShort call decays in your favour
VEGANegativeWants IV to fall
GAMMASlight negativeNear and above the strike

A covered call has roughly the same Greeks profile as a naked short put at the same strike (this is the fundamental synthetic-equivalence most traders learn at some point). Understanding this parallel is one of the most valuable mental models in options.

Example trade (educational only)

You hold one lot (250 shares) of Reliance at an average cost of ₹2,400. Stock is currently trading at 2,410, the monthly 2,500 CE is at ₹40. You sell one 2,500 CE for a credit of ₹40 × 250 = ₹10,000.

Break-even on the combined position = entry − premium = ₹2,360. Max profit = (2,500 − 2,400) + 40 = ₹140 × 250 = ₹35,000.

Adjustments & exits

Who should study this

Long-term equity holders, dividend-style income investors, and anyone transitioning from buy-and-hold to active position management. The covered call is the single best bridge from equity investing to options — low complexity, clear mechanics, teaches you to think about your holdings as productive assets.

See if this income style fits you — take the Trader Quiz.

Practice this on paper before real capital.

Covered calls look easy — and they mostly are, until a stock you love rips 15% and you're on the wrong side. Paper-trade a few cycles on paper holdings before selling premium on real positions.

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