Neutral-to-Bullish BeginnerIncome

Covered Call

Hold the underlying and sell a call against it to earn premium income, capping upside in exchange for a small buffer.

What is a Covered Call?

A Covered Call combines a long position in the underlying (stock or futures) with a short OTM call. The premium collected generates income and lowers your effective cost basis. In return you agree to cap your gains at the call strike — if the underlying rallies past it, your stock is 'called away' (or the short call offsets further gains). It is one of the most popular income strategies for investors who are mildly bullish or expect the market to drift sideways.

Payoff Diagram

Profit & Loss at expiry

Per share (multiply by lot size 75). Gold dots mark breakeven points; green = profit, red = loss.

2000020400BE 19880+652-300-712Underlying price at expiry
Max Profit
(Strike − Purchase price) + Premium received — capped at the strike.
Max Loss
Substantial — underlying can fall to zero; premium only cushions part of it. (Cost basis − Premium).
Breakeven
Underlying purchase price − Premium received
Outlook
Neutral-to-Bullish

Construction

  • Own (or buy) the underlying — 1 lot / 100 shares equivalent.
  • Sell 1 OTM Call against that holding.
  • Collect the premium; repeat each expiry cycle ('rolling').

When to Use It

Use on holdings you are happy to hold or exit at the strike, when you expect flat-to-modestly-higher prices. Selling calls in high-IV periods maximises premium income. Not ideal before a big expected rally, which you would cap.

The Greeks

Positive Delta (net long), Negative Gamma, Negative Vega, Positive Theta (time decay works in your favour on the short call).

Risks & Considerations

  • Upside is capped — you miss gains beyond the strike.
  • The premium only partly offsets a large fall in the underlying.
  • Assignment/physical settlement obligations on stock options at expiry.

Worked Example (Nifty)

Illustrative trade — lot size 75

You hold Nifty futures at 20,000 and sell the 20,400 CE for ₹120. You collect ₹120 × 75 = ₹9,000. If Nifty expires at 20,400, you gain 400 points on futures + ₹120 premium = (400 + 120) × 75 = ₹39,000. Above 20,400 your extra futures gains are offset by the short call. Below 20,000 the ₹9,000 premium cushions your loss.

Frequently Asked Questions

What if the stock rockets past my strike?
Your gains are capped at the strike + premium. You still profit, but you forgo the extra upside. Some traders 'roll up' the short call to a higher strike to capture more.
Is a covered call really 'safe'?
It is safer than holding the underlying alone because the premium cushions small drops, but you still carry the full downside of the underlying. It is an income strategy, not a hedge.
How do I pick the strike?
Higher (further OTM) strikes = less premium but more upside room; nearer strikes = more premium but tighter cap. Many sell the strike near a Delta of 0.30.
Educational content only — not investment advice. The example above uses illustrative numbers and does not reflect live market prices. Options trading involves substantial risk. See our Risk Disclosure and SEBI Disclaimer.