Poor Man's Covered Call
Buy a deep ITM LEAPS call and sell a short-term OTM call against it.
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What Is a Poor Man's Covered Call?
The Poor Man's Covered Call (PMCC) is a diagonal spread strategy that replicates the mechanics of a covered call without requiring you to buy 100 shares of the underlying stock. Instead, you buy a deep in-the-money LEAPS call option (typically 6–18 months to expiration, with a delta of 0.80 or higher) as a stock substitute, and then sell shorter-term out-of-the-money calls against it each month to collect premium — exactly like a covered call writer does. Because the LEAPS call costs significantly less than 100 shares, this strategy requires far less capital while maintaining similar income-generating characteristics. The LEAPS acts as synthetic stock: it moves with the stock, appreciates if the stock rises, and provides the collateral for the short call. The PMCC is especially valuable on high-priced stocks where owning 100 shares would be prohibitively expensive.
When to Use a Poor Man's Covered Call
Use a PMCC when you want to run covered call income on an expensive stock but don't have the capital to buy 100 shares, or when you want to use options leverage to reduce your capital commitment on a stock you are long-term bullish on. The strategy works best on stocks with strong fundamentals in a neutral-to-moderately bullish trend. Avoid the PMCC on highly volatile or speculative stocks — a large gap down can destroy the value of your LEAPS, leaving you holding a nearly worthless long option while the short call expires profitably. Enter the LEAPS when IV is relatively low (so the back-month option is cheaper) and sell the short-term calls when IV is relatively high (so you collect more monthly income).
Trade Structure
Buy 1 deep ITM LEAPS call (delta ≥ 0.80, expiration 6–18 months out) as the long leg. Then sell 1 near-term OTM call (30–45 DTE) against it each month to collect income. The key constraint: the short call's strike must always be above the LEAPS strike, and the short call's expiration must always be before or at the LEAPS expiration. This ensures you never end up short a call you cannot deliver.
Max Profit
Cumulative monthly income from sold short-term calls minus the net debit paid for the LEAPS, calculated over the LEAPS holding period. If the short calls consistently expire worthless and the LEAPS appreciates with the stock, the strategy can return significant income over the LEAPS lifetime. The theoretical cap is the difference between the LEAPS strike and the short call strike plus all credits collected.
Max Loss
Net debit paid for the LEAPS minus any credits collected from short calls. If the stock collapses and the LEAPS goes far out of the money, it can approach worthlessness, and the credits from short calls may not be enough to offset the loss. This is the primary risk: a large, sustained stock decline that destroys the LEAPS' value. Maximum loss is the initial debit minus all premiums collected.
Breakeven
LEAPS strike plus the net debit paid for the entire position (LEAPS cost minus credits collected from short calls over time). The breakeven decreases each month as you collect premium — this is the compounding benefit of the strategy. After several months of income, your effective breakeven can be substantially below the stock's entry price.
Greeks Profile
Net delta is high and positive because the deep ITM LEAPS has a delta near 0.80–0.90, while the short OTM call has a much lower delta — resulting in a net positive directional exposure similar to owning stock. Theta is ideally net positive: the short call decays faster than the longer-dated LEAPS, so you collect more decay from the sold call than you lose on the long. Vega is net positive — the LEAPS is more sensitive to IV changes than the short-dated call, so rising IV generally benefits the position. Gamma is small at the portfolio level due to the offset between long and short legs.
Poor Man's Covered Call Trading Tips
- Buy LEAPS with delta ≥ 0.80 — this ensures the LEAPS moves nearly dollar-for-dollar with the stock, giving you genuine stock-substitute exposure.
- Sell the monthly short call 30–45 DTE at a strike where you are comfortable if the stock rallies to that level (and potentially gets assigned).
- Roll the short call forward when it approaches expiration: buy to close and sell the next month's call to maintain continuous income generation.
- If the stock rallies toward and through the short call strike, roll the call up and out — buy back the current call, sell a higher strike in a later expiration — to avoid having the position closed out.
- If the stock drops significantly, stop selling new short calls and allow the LEAPS to recover before resuming the strategy.
- The LEAPS can itself be rolled forward before it approaches 90 days to expiration — sell the current LEAPS and buy a new, further-dated one to avoid accelerating time decay on the long leg.
- The PMCC requires active management — it is not a set-and-forget position. Monitor it weekly and have a plan for adjustments.
- Calculate your effective stock cost: if LEAPS at $30 delta 0.85 controls $100 stock, your capital requirement is $3,000 versus $10,000 for shares — the leverage is real and beneficial, but so is the risk of LEAPS decay if the trade goes wrong.