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Spread bets and CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 70% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading spread bets and CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how spread bets and CFDs work, and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
Spread bets and CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 70% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading spread bets and CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how spread bets and CFDs work, and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

What is a short call option and how to trade it?

Short Call Summary

  • Selling an uncovered call is a bearish strategy that can benefit when the stock remains below the short call's strike price or falls.

  • Like other short premium options strategies, naked call sellers benefit from time decay, which can erode the option's value, allowing the investor to buy it back to close at a lower price to yield a potential profit.

  • A short call can be a more capital-efficient way of gaining short exposure to a specific underlying without having to short shares outright.

  • The maximum profit for a naked call is the initial credit received.

  • The max loss for an uncovered call is unlimited since the underlying, in theory, can rise infinitely.

Short Call Option

A short call is a neutral to bearish strategy. A short call is sold to open at a strike price at or above the stock's current market price. The short call strategy also goes by other names, including bear call, naked call, and uncovered call.


Selling a naked call can be an alternative method of gaining bearish exposure to a particular underlying without shorting shares outright. Investors can sell to open out-of-the-money (OTM) or in-the-money (ITM) call(s) when establishing a short call position.

Short Call Option

The ideal scenario when selling OTM uncovered calls is when the underlying does not breach or approach the short call’s strike price over the life of the trade and expires worthless. This allows the call to erode all of its extrinsic value by the expiration of the contract to yield maximum profit. However, when selling ITM naked calls, investors require a much larger downward price move so the option goes OTM and, ideally, expires worthless to yield a maximum profit.

In-the-money (ITM) calls are usually worth more than out-of-the-money (OTM) calls because they have intrinsic value and usually extrinsic value as well. Intrinsic value describes an option's immediate value for being ITM, which is the difference between the underlying price and the strike. An option's extrinsic value depends on several factors, such as time left to expiration and implied volatility. Although short ITM calls are usually more valuable than short OTM calls and may yield greater profits if the underlying moves down, reducing the value of the call itself, they come with greater risks.

Since short calls synthetically provide bearish exposure to a specific underlying, there may be additional risks associated with holding a short call position. While ITM options generally have higher (early) assignment risk than OTM options, some situations can increase the chance of early assignment on a short call, such as dividend risk if the underlying pays one, hard-to-borrow fees when there is heightened short interest, and theoretical unlimited losses of holding short shares after assignment. When an investor is short a call, it can convert to 100 short shares per contract before expiration if assigned, and the investor will assume the risk of short shares after assignment. This risk still applies to short calls that are not assigned as it represents the theoretical equivalent of 100 shares of short stock.

Like other short option strategies, time decay can help erode an OTM call option's value when the underlying price remains stable and doesn't approach the short call option's strike price.

Maximum profit occurs when a short call remains out of the money until expiration and expires worthless. Investors do not have to wait until the contract expires to close the position. Profit can also occur when an investor buys (covers) the short call back before it expires at a price lower than it was sold for. On the contrary, an investor can incur a loss when buying back a short call at a higher price than it was sold for.

Uncovered calls are only allowed in an IG| tastytrade margin account. Please visit the Help Center to learn more about strategies by account type.

Expiration Risk for Naked Calls

Options that expire in the money by $0.01 or more are auto-exercised/assigned, resulting in an assignment of 100 short shares of stock for each ITM short call.

Short call expiration risk

Moreover, any options strategy involving short options, including a naked short call, may face after-hours risk on the day of expiration. In summary, although the short call may have expired OTM based on the closing price of the underlying, an OTM short call option can become ITM based on any extreme upward price movement after the market close, resulting in an unexpected assignment of short shares. As a result, the investor would assume the risk of 100 short shares per contract assigned, which theoretically has unlimited risk. The only way to eliminate after-hours risk is by closing any short options positions before expiration.

It's crucial to have a plan, like closing or rolling the position before expiration, if a short share assignment is not part of your strategy. Please visit the Help Center to learn more about Expiration Risk, including more about pin risk and after-hours risk.

Profit & Loss Diagram of a Short/Naked Call

A short/naked call can achieve a maximum profit if it expires OTM and is worthless, as illustrated in the flattened green shaded area below. Naked calls can potentially remain profitable if the underlying remains below the breakeven price, as shown where the red and green zones converge on the x-axis. This is why the short call is said to be neutral to bearish, as opposed to a purely bearish strategy like shorting shares of stock. When selling options, the max profit on the strategy is the initial credit received. A short call will incur losses if the call closes above the breakeven zone at expiration, which is defined as the short call strike plus the credit received upfront for selling the call contract. Please be mindful of assignment risk for ITM short option as assignment can happen at any time up to the expiration date. As always, manage your options positions closely.

Short call

Example of a Short Call

XYZ currently trading @ $45

  • 1 XYZ 50-strike call @ $4.00 credit

Collect a $4.00 credit ($400 total)

Time Decay Affect

Works for you by decaying the value of the call

Max Profit

Total credit received ($400)

Max Loss

Infinite

Breakeven Price (at expiration)

Strike price + Credit received

$50 short strike + $4.00 credit = $54 breakeven price

Account Type Required

Margin

Other Names

Bear call

Naked call

Naked short call

Uncovered call