CRM Wheel: Strike Selection, Premium & Risk

How to sell wheels on Salesforce Inc. — optimal strikes, expected premium, and the risks that actually matter for a large-cap technology name.

TechnologyModerate IVExcellent liquidityPays dividend

Is CRM a good wheel candidate?

CRM (Salesforce Inc.) is a large-cap technology name with a mid-range share price and excellent 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 also pays a dividend, which adds a second income stream on top of the premium you collect.

Strike selection for a CRM wheel

For the CRM wheel, sell puts 7-10% below the current price until you are assigned. Once you own the shares, flip to covered calls 5-8% above your cost basis. On a moderate-volatility name, cycling 30-45 DTE — the sweet spot for theta-to-gamma balance expirations keeps theta working in your favor without over-exposing you to gamma around earnings.

Expected premium and income on CRM

Typical monthly premium collected on CRM 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 CRM is $5,000-$20,000 — the share price and the 100-share lot size set the minimum, not the strategy.

Reference Trade

Stock price$310-350
IV rankModerate (35-50)
Avg monthly premium1.5-2.5%
Annualized return18-30%

Example Covered Call on CRM

  • Strike: $350 (7% OTM)
  • Expiration: 30 days
  • Premium: $6.50 per share
  • Return if flat: 2.0% ($650)
  • Return if called: 8.9% ($2,900)
  • Probability keep shares: 70% keep shares

Risk management for CRM wheel trades

The wheel works beautifully in sideways and slowly-trending markets but struggles in sharp selloffs where you get put stock well above market and then have to wait for covered-call opportunities at your cost basis. CRM 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.

CRM Wheel FAQ

Is CRM a good stock for the wheel strategy?

CRM is excellent for the wheel because of its penny-wide spreads and moderate IV (good premium/risk balance). It also pays a dividend, which you continue collecting while holding the shares between wheel legs.

What expiration should I use for CRM wheel trades?

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

Is CRM suitable for beginners selling options?

Yes — it's a well-known, liquid name with established options markets, which is what beginners need.

Related CRM strategies

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