CDNS Poor Man's Covered Call: Strike Selection, Premium & Risk

How to sell poor man's covered calls on Cadence Design Systems — optimal strikes, expected premium, and the risks that actually matter for a large-cap technology name.

TechnologyModerate IVGood liquidity

Is CDNS a good poor man's covered call candidate?

CDNS (Cadence Design Systems) is a large-cap technology name with a mid-range share price and good options liquidity. Implied volatility is moderate — enough premium to make selling options worthwhile, without the heart-stopping price swings you get on speculative names. It pays no dividend, so every dollar of income must come from the options you sell.

Strike selection for a CDNS poor man's covered call

For a CDNS PMCC, buy a long-dated call with 0.80+ delta (typically 12-18 months out) as your synthetic long, then sell short-dated calls 5-8% above the stock price at 0.20-0.30 delta. The LEAPS tie up roughly 30-50% of the capital of buying 100 shares, which is especially valuable on a mid-range share price ticker like CDNS.

Expected premium and income on CDNS

Typical monthly premium collected on CDNS runs around 1.0-2.0% of capital, which annualizes to roughly 12-24% if you sell new contracts every cycle. Capital required to run a single contract wheel on CDNS is $5,000-$20,000 — the share price and the 100-share lot size set the minimum, not the strategy.

Risk management for CDNS poor man's covered call trades

PMCC risk is concentrated at the LEAPS expiration: if the stock collapses, the long-dated call can lose significant value quickly. You also have to manage the short call not going deep in the money against you before your LEAPS appreciates equivalently. CDNS moves in a moderate-volatility range most of the time, but earnings week and sector rotations can still produce 5%+ single-day prints. Tech names are especially vulnerable to interest-rate shifts and earnings guidance revisions — both tend to produce gap moves that hurt short options.

CDNS Poor Man's Covered Call FAQ

Can you run a poor man's covered call on CDNS?

Yes. Buy a 0.80+ delta LEAPS on CDNS dated 12-18 months out as your synthetic long, then sell short-dated calls 5-8% above the stock at 0.20-0.30 delta. Capital tied up drops from $5,000-$20,000 to roughly 30-50% of that — a meaningful improvement when the share price is a mid-range share price.

What expiration should I use for CDNS poor man's covered call trades?

Use 30-45 DTE as a default for CDNS. This is the classic theta sweet spot and works well on a stable ticker like this.

Is CDNS suitable for beginners selling options?

Yes — it's a well-known, liquid name with established options markets, which is what beginners need. Always check the bid/ask spread before entering — anything wider than 5% of the mid price is a warning sign.

Related CDNS strategies

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