Assignment explained - 03 - How to use option assignment to your advantage

Koen Hoorelbeke
Investment and Options Strategist
How to use option assignment to your advantage
This article is part of a four-part mini-series on option assignment—created for investors and active traders alike. Whether you're just starting out or deep into advanced strategies, understanding assignment will help you manage risk and opportunity more confidently.
This is part 3: How to use option assignment to your advantage.
- New to how assignment works? Start with
Part 1: Assignment explained – what every options trader and investor should know. - Looking to avoid assignment before it happens? Read
Part 2: How to avoid assignment in options trading. - Want a quick-reference recap? Go to
Part 4: Option assignment cheat sheet – what to watch, when to act, and how to respond.
When options traders hear the word “assignment,” their first reaction is often stress. But here’s the truth: assignment isn’t a problem—it’s a payoff. It’s the logical end of a trade that you got paid to take. And in many cases, it can work in your favor. Whether you’re an investor using options to build positions or a trader managing spreads and condors, assignment doesn’t have to be the end of the story. In fact, it can be the start of your next opportunity.
Let’s start with the basics: when you sell an option, you’re agreeing to fulfill the terms of the contract. If you sell a put, you may be required to buy the stock at the strike price. If you sell a call, you may need to deliver shares. When that happens, you’re “assigned.” But the idea that this is somehow a failure—or a scenario to avoid at all costs—is misplaced. Assignment is just one possible (and foreseeable) outcome.
Assignment as a tool for investors
Take a cash-secured put, for example. If you sell a put on a stock you wouldn’t mind owning, you’re basically saying: “I’m happy to buy this at a discount.” And if you’re assigned, you do just that. The premium you received lowers your effective entry price, sometimes by several percent. That’s a smart way to accumulate shares—especially during market pullbacks.
Once you own the shares, you can turn around and sell a covered call. If assigned again, you’ve effectively sold the stock at a profit. If not, you collect more premium. This “wheel strategy” is one of the simplest and most effective ways long-term investors can use assignment to generate cash flow.
Covered calls themselves are another way investors use assignment deliberately. When a stock reaches your target price, and your short call is in the money, you may be assigned. That’s not a problem—it’s a planned exit. You sold the call, collected a premium, and sold the stock at a price you were already happy with. Even early assignment can work to your advantage, especially if it locks in long-term capital gains.
When traders get assigned—it’s not the end
For traders using more complex strategies like vertical spreads, iron condors, or straddles, assignment can feel disruptive. Suddenly you’re long or short stock, your P/L shifts, and your margin moves. But the structure of the trade hasn’t necessarily broken down.
Imagine you’re long a call spread and your short call is assigned. Now you’re short 100 shares. But you still hold the long call. You can exercise it to flatten your position, or hold both legs until expiration. Your risk remains capped. You can even explore other choices, like converting to a synthetic or hedging with a short put. The key is not to panic—but to assess what you own and decide how to manage it.
Assignment in iron condors often means one side has been breached. Say your short put is assigned and you’re now long stock, while your long put remains. You could simply exercise the long put to close the position. Or you might hold the shares, sell a covered call, and turn the whole setup into a different strategy. The same goes for butterflies or strangles—assignment simply changes the composition, not the core logic.
A look at synthetic positions
Let’s revisit the example of a synthetic long: long call and short put at the same strike and expiry. This mirrors a long stock position. If the put is deep in the money and assigned, you now hold the actual shares. But your call is still live. You’ve swapped a synthetic position for real stock, with nearly identical delta and risk. You can manage it however you like: hold it, sell the shares, keep the call, or close both. Assignment in this case is just another way to express the same view.
Strategic adjustments after assignment
Once you’ve been assigned, your next steps depend on your objectives:
- Want to stay invested? Sell a call and turn the shares into a covered call.
- Prefer to cut risk? Use your remaining long option to exit.
- Interested in income? Hold the stock and sell weekly calls.
- Need to adjust margin? Replace stock with deep in-the-money calls (synthetic long).
- See volatility ahead? Pair your stock with a long put for protection.
Assignment doesn’t limit your options—it opens new ones. The key is preparation.
Why mindset matters
Traders often fear assignment because it feels like losing control. But in reality, it’s part of the plan. You accepted a premium in exchange for a potential obligation. That obligation materialized. Now you manage it—professionally and calmly.
When you stop viewing assignment as a setback, and instead see it as an opportunity to reshape or reinforce your strategy, your whole approach changes. You trade more confidently. You act decisively. You see the full picture.
Final thoughts
Assignment isn’t a trap—it’s a transition. For investors, it means acquiring or offloading shares at attractive levels. For traders, it’s a shift in structure, not strategy. In both cases, it’s manageable—and often profitable—when you’ve planned ahead.
If you trade options, assignment will eventually come your way. The difference is whether you greet it with panic—or a playbook. The smart move? Build the playbook now.
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