Wheel Strategy Masterclass
Introduction: The Perpetual Income Machine
The Wheel Strategy is one of the most popular income strategies because it combines selling puts and covered calls into a cycle that continuously generates premium month after month. Traders often repeat this strategy indefinitely, treating it as their primary income source. Once you master it, the Wheel becomes almost automatic—sell puts until assigned, sell calls against shares, rinse and repeat.
The Wheel Cycle Explained
Phase 1: Sell Cash-Secured Puts
The cycle begins by selling puts on a stock you'd actually like to own:
Month 1 (March 6, 2026):
Stock: MSFT at $405
You believe it's a quality company; you'd happily own it at $385-$390
Action:
Sell 2 April 17 MSFT 390 puts for $3.75 each = +$750
Cash secured: $39,000 (if assigned)
Best outcome (Cycle continues without assignment):
MSFT stays above $390 at expiration
Puts expire worthless; keep premium ($750)
Free money! Repeat next month.
Stock: MSFT at $405
You believe it's a quality company; you'd happily own it at $385-$390
Action:
Sell 2 April 17 MSFT 390 puts for $3.75 each = +$750
Cash secured: $39,000 (if assigned)
Best outcome (Cycle continues without assignment):
MSFT stays above $390 at expiration
Puts expire worthless; keep premium ($750)
Free money! Repeat next month.
Phase 2: Get Assigned (If Stock Falls)
If the stock drops below your put strike, you're assigned and now own shares:
Assignment Scenario:
April 17 expiration arrives; MSFT at $388 (below $390 strike)
Result:
You're assigned on 2 short puts
You own 200 shares at effective cost: $390 - $3.75 = $386.25
P&L from put-selling phase:
Collected: $750
Shares now own: 200 at $386.25 effective cost = $77,250
April 17 expiration arrives; MSFT at $388 (below $390 strike)
Result:
You're assigned on 2 short puts
You own 200 shares at effective cost: $390 - $3.75 = $386.25
P&L from put-selling phase:
Collected: $750
Shares now own: 200 at $386.25 effective cost = $77,250
Phase 3: Sell Covered Calls
Now you own shares. Sell calls against them to generate income and define your exit:
Month 2 (April 17, same day as assignment):
You now own 200 MSFT shares at $386.25 effective cost
MSFT trading at $388
Action:
Sell 2 May 22 MSFT 410 calls for $2.80 each = +$560
You're happy to sell shares at $410 (24 points above your cost basis)
Outcomes:
If MSFT stays below $410: Calls expire; keep premium + repeatable
If MSFT above $410: Shares called away at $410 profit
You now own 200 MSFT shares at $386.25 effective cost
MSFT trading at $388
Action:
Sell 2 May 22 MSFT 410 calls for $2.80 each = +$560
You're happy to sell shares at $410 (24 points above your cost basis)
Outcomes:
If MSFT stays below $410: Calls expire; keep premium + repeatable
If MSFT above $410: Shares called away at $410 profit
Phase 4: Called Away or Roll (Repeat Cycle)
Scenario A - Called Away (Best outcome):
May 22 expiration; MSFT at $415 (above $410 call strike)
Result:
Shares called away at $410
Gain on shares: ($410 - $386.25) × 200 = $4,750
Gain on calls: $560
Total Phase 2-3 profit: $5,310
Combined with Phase 1 profit: $750 + $5,310 = $6,060 in 52 days
Return on deployed capital: $6,060 / $77,250 = 7.8% annualized!
Scenario B - Not Called Away (Also good):
May 22 expiration; MSFT at $405 (below $410)
Calls expire; keep $560 premium; still own shares
Sell next month's June 22 410 calls; repeat the income generation
May 22 expiration; MSFT at $415 (above $410 call strike)
Result:
Shares called away at $410
Gain on shares: ($410 - $386.25) × 200 = $4,750
Gain on calls: $560
Total Phase 2-3 profit: $5,310
Combined with Phase 1 profit: $750 + $5,310 = $6,060 in 52 days
Return on deployed capital: $6,060 / $77,250 = 7.8% annualized!
Scenario B - Not Called Away (Also good):
May 22 expiration; MSFT at $405 (below $410)
Calls expire; keep $560 premium; still own shares
Sell next month's June 22 410 calls; repeat the income generation
Ideal Stocks for the Wheel
Selection Criteria
| Criteria | Why It Matters | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Quality fundamentals | You'll own them; need to be happy long-term | MSFT, AAPL, NVDA, JNJ, MO |
| Liquid options | Need tight bid-ask spreads; easy entries/exits | Large-cap; weekly expirations available |
| $200+ stock price | Lower portfolio size per share; easier to manage | Avoid sub-$100 stocks for simplicity |
| Moderate volatility | Enough premium for income; not overly speculative | VIX-correlated; 30-50 IV rank |
| Positive thesis | You believe in the company long-term | Growing revenue, profitable, good management |
Strike and Expiry Selection
Put Strike Selection
- Target .20-.30 delta: This gives 20-30% probability of assignment, 70-80% chance puts expire worthless
- Choose strike where you're happy to own: If strike is $390 and stock crashes to $300, are you still happy? Yes = good strike
- Avoid too-low strikes: The ultra-low puts might look safe but generate minimal premium
Call Strike Selection
- Target .20-.30 delta (on the call side): 20-30% probability of assignment
- Aim for 15-25% above your cost basis: If you bought at $386, sell 410-430 range calls
- Use 30-45 day expirations: Enough time decay, but not so long that you're locked in if fundamentals change
Full 12-Week Simulation: Real Numbers
Starting Capital: $100,000 | Target: 3 Wheel cycles in 12 weeks
CYCLE 1 (Weeks 1-4, April 17)
Stock: NVDA at $580
Phase 1: Sell puts
Sell 2x April 17 560 puts @ $5.00 = +$1,000
Stock stays above $560; puts expire
Capital still available: $100,000
CYCLE 2 (Weeks 5-8, May 22)
Sell 1x May 22 560 put @ $4.50 = +$450
NVDA drops to $550; assigned!
Own 100 shares at: $560 - $4.50 = $555.50 effective cost
Capital deployed: $55,550
Immediately sell covered call:
Sell 1x May 22 590 call @ $3.50 = +$350
NVDA rises to $595; called away!
Shares sold at: $590
Gain on shares: ($590 - $555.50) × 100 = $3,450
Total gain (Phase 1 + 2): $1,000 + $450 + $350 + $3,450 = $5,250
CYCLE 3 (Weeks 9-12, June 21)
Capital available again: $100,000
Sell 1x June 21 570 put @ $4.80 = +$480
Stock stays above 570; expires
Total 12-week profit: $5,250 + $480 = $5,730
Return: $5,730 / $100,000 = 5.7% in 12 weeks = 24% annualized
CYCLE 1 (Weeks 1-4, April 17)
Stock: NVDA at $580
Phase 1: Sell puts
Sell 2x April 17 560 puts @ $5.00 = +$1,000
Stock stays above $560; puts expire
Capital still available: $100,000
CYCLE 2 (Weeks 5-8, May 22)
Sell 1x May 22 560 put @ $4.50 = +$450
NVDA drops to $550; assigned!
Own 100 shares at: $560 - $4.50 = $555.50 effective cost
Capital deployed: $55,550
Immediately sell covered call:
Sell 1x May 22 590 call @ $3.50 = +$350
NVDA rises to $595; called away!
Shares sold at: $590
Gain on shares: ($590 - $555.50) × 100 = $3,450
Total gain (Phase 1 + 2): $1,000 + $450 + $350 + $3,450 = $5,250
CYCLE 3 (Weeks 9-12, June 21)
Capital available again: $100,000
Sell 1x June 21 570 put @ $4.80 = +$480
Stock stays above 570; expires
Total 12-week profit: $5,250 + $480 = $5,730
Return: $5,730 / $100,000 = 5.7% in 12 weeks = 24% annualized
Managing Downturns: What If Assigned and Stock Falls?
Scenario: You own shares at $555.50; stock crashes to $500
Options:
1. Hold & continue selling calls: Sell $510-520 calls to generate income while waiting for bounce
2. Stop loss: Accept loss and move on; frees capital
3. Average down: Sell more puts at lower strikes to collect additional premium
Pro advice: If fundamental thesis is intact, hold and sell calls. If thesis is broken (bad earnings, bankruptcy risk), accept loss and move on.
Options:
1. Hold & continue selling calls: Sell $510-520 calls to generate income while waiting for bounce
2. Stop loss: Accept loss and move on; frees capital
3. Average down: Sell more puts at lower strikes to collect additional premium
Pro advice: If fundamental thesis is intact, hold and sell calls. If thesis is broken (bad earnings, bankruptcy risk), accept loss and move on.
Key Takeaways
1. The Wheel is a repeatable income machine. Sell puts → collect premium → own shares → sell calls → collect premium → cycle repeats.
2. Only use stocks you'd truly own. You'll inevitably be assigned at some point; be happy to own them.
3. Target .20-.30 delta strikes. This gives good premium without excessive probability of assignment.
4. 12-24% annualized returns are realistic. Don't chase 50%+ annual yields; that's gambling, not income.
5. Manage assignments rationally. If assigned, immediately sell calls against your shares.
6. Stop if thesis breaks. If a stock fundamentally deteriorates, exit and find a new one to wheel.
2. Only use stocks you'd truly own. You'll inevitably be assigned at some point; be happy to own them.
3. Target .20-.30 delta strikes. This gives good premium without excessive probability of assignment.
4. 12-24% annualized returns are realistic. Don't chase 50%+ annual yields; that's gambling, not income.
5. Manage assignments rationally. If assigned, immediately sell calls against your shares.
6. Stop if thesis breaks. If a stock fundamentally deteriorates, exit and find a new one to wheel.
Test Your Knowledge
1. What are the main phases of the Wheel strategy?
A) Sell puts, get assigned, sell calls, repeat
B) Buy stock, sell covered calls, buy puts, wait
C) Sell calls, buy puts, sell more calls
D) Only sell puts forever
2. What type of stocks are ideal for the Wheel?
A) Highly speculative penny stocks
B) Stocks you'd be happy to own long-term with liquid options
C) Only tech stocks
D) Any stock with IV above 30%
3. What delta range should you target for puts in the Wheel?
A) .50+ delta (ATM or ITM)
B) .05-.15 delta (far OTM)
C) .20-.30 delta (balanced)
D) Delta doesn't matter
4. What should you do immediately after being assigned on a put?
A) Panic sell the shares
B) Hold and wait for the stock to recover
C) Immediately sell covered calls against the new shares
D) Sell more puts at lower strikes
5. What is a realistic annualized return target for the Wheel?
A) 1-2% (very conservative)
B) 12-24% (realistic long-term)
C) 50%+ (aggressive)
D) Infinite (free money)