SMCI covered call calculator
Live yields, downside cushion, and ex-dividend assignment warnings for Super Micro Computer.
Top 10 SMCI covered call strikes by annualized yield
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How covered calls work on SMCI
A covered call on SMCI means you own 100 shares (or a multiple of 100) and sell someone the right to buy them from you at a higher price (the strike) by a fixed date (the expiration). They pay you cash upfront (the premium). For the full mechanics, strike-selection rules, and rolling playbook, read the complete covered-calls guide.
Three outcomes:
- SMCI stays below the strike at expiry → you keep the premium and the shares.
- SMCI closes above the strike at expiry → your shares are sold at the strike. You realized the upside to the strike plus the premium.
- Early assignment → happens occasionally before ex-dividend dates if the dividend exceeds the call's time value.
SMCI-specific risk considerations
Very high implied volatility — premium income is rich but tail risk demands tight position sizing. SMCI does not currently pay a dividend, so ex-dividend early-assignment risk on short calls is not a concern.
How to use the SMCI covered call calculator
- The calculator pre-loads the SMCI live chain. Pick an expiration from the dropdown.
- Pick a strike. The Top 10 list above shows the highest-yielding strikes; you can also browse all strikes manually.
- Enter your cost basis (what you paid for SMCI) so the static and annualized yields reflect your actual cost.
- Read the results: static yield, if-called annualized return, downside cushion, and any ex-dividend assignment warnings.
Related strategies on SMCI
- Cash-secured puts on SMCI — collect premium for the obligation to buy at a lower price
- SMCI wheel strategy — full CC + CSP cycle for compounding income
- SMCI options overview — all strategies, all expirations
Related tickers for covered-call writing
FAQ
How is annualized yield calculated on a SMCI covered call?
Annualized yield = (Premium ÷ Cost basis) × (365 ÷ days to expiration). The calculator also produces an if-called annualized return that bakes in any upside to the strike and dividends collected before expiration.
What's a good delta for a SMCI covered call?
Most SMCI covered-call sellers target 0.20–0.35 delta. Lower delta gives lower yield with reduced assignment risk; higher delta gives more premium with greater chance of being called away. The strike-selection guide walks through the trade-offs in detail.
Should I worry about early assignment on SMCI?
SMCI does not currently pay a dividend, so ex-dividend early-assignment risk on short calls is not a concern. For the full mechanic of when and why short calls get exercised early, see early assignment explained.