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Cash Secured Puts 102: The Mathematics of ROI

How do you calculate the return on a CSP? We explore the math of "Return on Capital", the "Margin of Safety", and why dividends actually HELP put sellers.

Feb 18, 202611 min read

Calculating Return on Capital (ROC)

To compare a CSP to a bond or stock dividend, you need to annualize the return.

Formula: (Premium / Cash Collateral) x (365 / Days to Expiration).

Example: Sell $50 Put for $1.00 (30 days). Collateral = $5,000.

Return = ($100 / $5,000) = 2% in 30 days.

Annualized = 2% x 12 = 24%. This is how income traders target 20%+ yields.

The Dividend Bonus

Here is a secret: Dividends HURT call sellers, but they HELP put sellers.

When a stock goes ex-dividend, its price drops. The market prices this expected drop into the Put Option premiums.

This means Puts on high-dividend stocks are often more expensive (richer premium) than calls. You get paid extra to accept the risk of the dividend drop.

Pro Tip: Yield hunters love selling puts on Dividend Aristocrats to capture both the "Vol Premium" and the "Dividend Premium".

Margin of Safety

Your Break-even point is your "MoS".

If Stock is $55, and you sell the $50 Put for $2.00.

Break-even = $48.

The stock can drop $7 (12.7%) before you lose a single penny. This buffer is why CSPs are considered safer than pure stock ownership.

Stock Price

$55.00

Strike Price

$50.00

Premium

$2.00

Buffer (MoS)

12.7%

Key takeaways

  • Use Annualized ROC to compare opportunities.
  • Dividends increase put premiums, giving sellers a bonus.
  • The Premium acts as a "Margin of Safety" against price drops.
  • You can generate stock-like returns with less volatility.

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