V wheel strategy
Wheel-suitability analysis and live setup for Visa Inc.
Is V good for the wheel?
For wheel-strategy traders, V is a solid wheel candidate. The moderate implied volatility typical of large-cap US equities 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.
V pays a small 0.8% dividend. Dividend-capture early-assignment risk is minimal but worth tracking.
Need a refresher on the strategy itself? Read the full wheel-strategy guide and the best wheel stocks screen for context on how V compares to other candidates.
Step 1: Sell a cash-secured put on V
Sub-spot strikes ranked by annualized ROC.
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Step 2 (if assigned): Sell a covered call on V
Above-spot strikes ranked by annualized yield.
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How to run the wheel on V
- Sell a CSP. Pick a sub-spot strike from Step 1 that you'd be comfortable being assigned at. Set aside cash = strike × 100.
- Wait for expiration. If V closes above your strike, the put expires worthless — you keep premium and cash. Restart with another CSP.
- If assigned, you now own 100 shares of V at the strike. Your effective cost basis = strike − premium received.
- Sell a covered call. Pick an above-cost-basis strike from Step 2. Your goal is to be called away at a profit while collecting premium.
- If the call expires worthless, repeat Step 4 with another covered call.
- If called away, you sold the shares above cost basis and collected two rounds of premium. Restart at Step 1.
The Wheel Tracker can log each leg of your V wheel and compute the true return on capital across the full cycle. For deeper reading: realistic wheel returns, when to break the wheel, wheel tax implications, and risk management.
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FAQ
Is V a good stock for the wheel strategy?
For wheel-strategy traders, V is a solid wheel candidate. The moderate implied volatility typical of large-cap US equities 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 long does one V wheel cycle take?
Typical cycle length is 30–90 days for a CSP leg and 14–45 days for the covered-call leg, depending on the strikes and expirations selected. Full cycles average 60–180 days in practice.
What if V drops significantly while I'm holding shares?
You can continue selling covered calls above your cost basis even while the stock is down — the premium keeps coming in. The risk is being unable to find a strike above cost basis with meaningful premium; this is the central downside of the wheel in falling markets. See when to break the wheel for the decision framework.