Back to all articles
Education

Options Academy

Cash Secured Puts 106: Advanced Selling (Naked Puts)

Ready to graduate? We discuss "Naked Puts" - selling on margin. Learn the Regulation T rules, leverage risks, and how to boost ROIC without blowing up.

Feb 18, 202612 min read

Cash Secured vs. Naked

Cash Secured: You have 100% of the cash ($10,000 for a $100 stock). Safe, no leverage.

Naked (Margin): You only put up a fraction of the value as collateral (e.g., $2,000). Leveraged, higher risk, higher ROC.

Note: "Naked" sounds scary, but if you have the cash elsewhere (e.g., in T-Bills), it is just capital efficient.

Regulation T Margin Rule

How much margin do you need? The Fed has a formula:

Requirement = 20% of Stock Price + Put Premium - OTM Amount.

Example: Stock $100. Sell $90 Put for $1.00.

20% of $100 = $20.

Premium = $1.

OTM Amount = $10 ($100 - $90).

Margin = $20 + $1 - $10 = $11 per share ($1,100 total).

Compare $1,100 margin vs $9,000 cash secured. That is 8x leverage.

Warning: Leverage cuts both ways. A small drop in stock price can wipe out your margin equity.

The Stress Test

Before selling naked, ask: "If the stock drops 20% tomorrow, will I get a Margin Call?"

Always keep 50% of your buying power free. Never max out your leverage. The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.

Key takeaways

  • Naked Puts use Margin to free up capital.
  • Reg T Rule: Approx 20% collateral required.
  • Leverage boosts ROI but introduces Margin Call risk.
  • This concludes the Chapter 3 Cash Secured Put Masterclass.

Think you've got it? Take the 5-question quiz

Test what you just learned — a free account shows your score and full explanations.

Series

Cash Secured Put Masterclass

Keep exploring

More field notes

View all articles

Jul 4, 2026

What Is Theta? Why Your Option Loses Money Even When You Are Right

The stock did not move all weekend, yet your option lost value — that is Theta, the invisible hourglass over every option buyer. A full walkthrough of time decay.

Keep reading

Jul 4, 2026

What Happens at Options Expiration? One Cent Triggers It, $10,000 Buys the Shares

Doing nothing at expiration is not just "the premium goes to zero": one cent in the money triggers auto-exercise, and a $2 premium can turn into $10,000 of stock. Here is exactly what happens.

Keep reading