Poor Man’s Covered Call Calculator
Model your PMCC before you place it. Enter your LEAPS strike and cost plus your short call strike and premium to instantly see max profit, max loss, breakeven, and a full P&L diagram.
How to Use This Calculator
Enter four inputs and the calculator handles the rest. Results update instantly as you type.
Pull current market data (optional)
Type a ticker like AAPL and click Get Price. The calculator fills in the current stock price, dividend yield, and the risk-free rate from the 13-week T-bill, then loads the option chain so you can pick actual strikes and premiums.
Set up your poor man’s covered call legs
The poor man’s covered call legs are preloaded for you. Pick each strike, expiration, and premium straight from the option chain, or type your own numbers. The calculator works out implied volatility from the premium you enter, and you can still edit it.
Calculate and read the results
Click Calculate P&L to see max profit, max loss, breakeven, return on risk, and probability of profit, plus position Greeks: delta, gamma, theta, vega, and rho.
Stress test before you trade
Drag the view-date slider to see your P&L curve on any day before expiration, shift implied volatility up or down 50 points, and scan the price-by-date P&L table to see how the trade behaves across scenarios.
This poor man’s covered call calculator prices each leg with your choice of an American-style binomial model (the default for US equity options) or European Black-Scholes-Merton, and accounts for dividend yield. You can set a per-contract commission, copy a shareable link to your exact setup, download the chart as a PNG, and switch to dark mode.
Understanding the Poor Man’s Covered Call
Key numbers every PMCC trader needs to know before entering the position.
The poor man’s covered call works by using a deep in-the-money LEAPS call as a low-cost substitute for 100 shares of stock. Because the LEAPS has a high delta (typically 0.80 or above), it moves nearly in lockstep with the underlying while costing a fraction of what 100 shares would. You then sell a short-term out-of-the-money call against the LEAPS, collecting premium that reduces your net debit each cycle.
The strategy works best in a moderately bullish environment. You want the stock to drift higher slowly, allowing the short call to expire worthless each cycle so you can sell another one. If the stock surges past your short call strike, your upside is capped at the spread width minus net debit, but you still profit. If the stock drops significantly, your loss is limited to the original net debit, unlike a traditional covered call where losses grow with every dollar the stock falls below your effective cost basis.
A key rule of thumb for PMCCs: make sure the width between your two strikes (the spread width) is greater than your net debit. If the spread width is less than the net debit, max profit is negative and the trade is not worth entering.
PMCC Example Trade
XYZ is trading at $100. You buy a 12-month $80 LEAPS call for $25.00 and sell a 30-day $105 call for $2.50.
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