EXAS Wheel: Strike Selection, Premium & Risk
How to sell wheels on Exact Sciences — optimal strikes, expected premium, and the risks that actually matter for a mid-cap healthcare name.
Is EXAS a good wheel candidate?
EXAS (Exact Sciences) is a mid-cap healthcare name with a low share price and good options liquidity. Implied volatility is high enough to pay meaningful premium without being wild, which is why this ticker shows up frequently in wheel-strategy watchlists. It pays no dividend, so every dollar of income must come from the options you sell.
Strike selection for a EXAS wheel
For the EXAS wheel, sell puts 10-15% below the current price until you are assigned. Once you own the shares, flip to covered calls 8-12% above your cost basis. On a high-volatility name, cycling 21-35 DTE to capture IV without excess gamma risk expirations keeps theta working in your favor without over-exposing you to gamma around earnings.
Expected premium and income on EXAS
Typical monthly premium collected on EXAS runs around 2.0-3.5% of capital, which annualizes to roughly 24-42% if you sell new contracts every cycle. Capital required to run a single contract wheel on EXAS is under $5,000 — the share price and the 100-share lot size set the minimum, not the strategy.
Risk management for EXAS 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. EXAS's high-volatility profile means 3-6% daily moves are normal during earnings or macro catalysts. Healthcare is exposed to FDA decisions, clinical trial readouts, and policy headlines that can gap the stock overnight. Pharma names need special care around PDUFA dates.
EXAS Wheel FAQ
Is EXAS a good stock for the wheel strategy?
EXAS is solid for the wheel because of its reasonable spreads and elevated IV (high premium, higher assignment risk). No dividend means all your return comes from premiums and price appreciation.
What expiration should I use for EXAS wheel trades?
Use 21-35 DTE to capture IV without excess gamma risk as a default for EXAS. This window captures the steepest part of the theta curve without excess gamma risk.
Is EXAS suitable for beginners selling options?
Mostly yes, though beginners should use small size and confirm liquidity on each expiration they trade. Always check the bid/ask spread before entering — anything wider than 5% of the mid price is a warning sign.
Related EXAS strategies
Price a EXAS wheel right now
Use the free OptionsPilot calculator with live quotes to find the best wheel strike on EXAS.
Open the Strike Finder →