TCOM Options Trading — Covered Calls, Puts & the Wheel
A complete guide to selling options on Trip.com Group. Expected premiums, strike selection, real example trades, and the four strategies that actually work for TCOM.
Why trade options on TCOM?
TCOM (Trip.com Group) is a large-cap consumer discretionary name with a mid-range 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.
Typical monthly premium collected on TCOM 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 TCOM is $5,000-$20,000 — the share price and the 100-share lot size set the minimum, not the strategy.
Four strategies that work on TCOM
TCOM Covered Call
Sell upside calls against 100 shares you already own to collect premium every month while capping your upside.
Read the TCOM Covered Call guide →TCOM Cash-Secured Put
Sell a put backed by cash so you either get paid to wait or acquire the stock at a discount to today's price.
Read the TCOM Cash-Secured Put guide →TCOM Wheel
Alternate between cash-secured puts and covered calls on the same ticker to generate continuous premium income.
Read the TCOM Wheel guide →TCOM Poor Man's Covered Call
Replace the 100 shares with a long-dated deep-ITM LEAPS call and sell short-dated calls against it to reduce capital.
Read the TCOM Poor Man's Covered Call guide →TCOM options FAQ
What is the best strike price for a TCOM covered call?
On TCOM, target 8-12% out of the money at 0.15-0.25 delta. On a high-volatility stock like this, closer-to-the-money strikes chase premium but spike assignment probability to uncomfortable levels.
How much premium can I collect selling calls on TCOM?
Typical monthly premium on TCOM is 2.0-3.5% of position value, annualizing to 24-42% when you roll every cycle. Earnings months can pay 2-3x the normal rate because of elevated IV.
What is the best delta for a TCOM cash-secured put?
A delta of 0.15-0.25 on TCOM balances premium income with assignment probability. Many traders anchor to 0.20 delta as a starting point and adjust based on their willingness to own shares.
How much cash do I need to sell a put on TCOM?
Cash required is 100 × strike price. For TCOM, that's roughly $5,000-$20,000 per contract at a typical strike. Most brokers let you use margin, but for a true cash-secured put you set aside the full amount.
Is TCOM a good stock for the wheel strategy?
TCOM 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.
Can you run a poor man's covered call on TCOM?
Yes. Buy a 0.80+ delta LEAPS on TCOM dated 12-18 months out as your synthetic long, then sell short-dated calls 8-12% above the stock at 0.15-0.25 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 TCOM options strategy trades?
Use 21-35 DTE to capture IV without excess gamma risk as a default for TCOM. This window captures the steepest part of the theta curve without excess gamma risk.
Is TCOM 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.
Run the numbers on TCOM yourself
Use the free OptionsPilot calculator to price covered calls and cash-secured puts on TCOM with live quotes.
Open the TCOM Strike Finder →