C cash-secured put calculator

Live sub-spot strikes ranked by annualized return on capital for Citigroup Inc.

C price
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Top 10 C cash-secured put strikes by annualized ROC

StrikeExpiryPremiumΔAnnual ROC

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Open the full C CSP calculator →

How a cash-secured put on C works

A cash-secured put on C means you set aside cash equal to strike × 100 × contracts — the maximum you'd owe if assigned. In exchange you receive premium up front. For the full setup, delta-selection rules, and assignment management, read the complete cash-secured puts guide.

Three outcomes:

Why C for a CSP

Elevated implied volatility — richer premiums offset by higher assignment risk. C pays a substantial 4.0% dividend. This makes early-assignment risk around ex-dividend dates a real consideration for covered-call sellers — if the dividend exceeds the call's remaining time value, expect the call to be exercised early.

For wheel-strategy traders, C is a workable wheel candidate. The elevated implied volatility — richer premiums offset by higher assignment risk means cash-secured puts collect meaningful premium, and the underlying business profile (Financials) makes it a name many income sellers would be comfortable being assigned at the right strike.

How to use the C CSP calculator

  1. The expiration dropdown loads the C live chain when you open the page.
  2. Pick a strike below the current price — the Top 10 list above ranks them by annualized ROC.
  3. Pick a delta range that matches your risk preference (0.20–0.30 is the typical income-seller zone).
  4. Read the results: cash at risk, premium yield, annualized ROC, effective cost basis if assigned, and breakeven.

Related strategies on C

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FAQ

How is annualized ROC calculated for a C CSP?

Annualized return on capital = (Premium ÷ Cash secured) × (365 ÷ days to expiration). Cash secured equals strike × 100 × number of contracts.

What's the effective cost basis if my C put is assigned?

Effective cost basis = strike − premium received. That's the actual price per share you pay if assigned, usually below the strike and often below the current market price. The CSP cost-basis deep-dive walks through the math with worked examples.

What strike should I sell on C?

Pick a sub-spot strike you would genuinely be comfortable owning C at. The Top 10 ranking helps surface candidates; ROC alone isn't enough — you need to want the assignment outcome at that price. The CSP delta-selection guide covers the trade-offs.