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Netflix earnings: using a cash-secured put to set a lower entry price

Options 10 minutes to read
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Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Summary:  Netflix reports earnings this week, and the stock can reprice quickly when guidance is updated. This educational case study shows how a cash-secured put can pay you for waiting while setting a pre-defined entry level you would be comfortable owning long term.


Netflix earnings: using a cash-secured put to set a lower entry price

Netflix reports earnings this week, and earnings updates can change how investors value a company in a single session. That is why prices can gap up or down overnight. For long-term investors, this often creates a trade-off: buying just before the report can feel uncomfortable, while waiting until after the report can feel safer but may mean missing a rebound. This educational case study explains one alternative approach: a cash-secured put, which aims to set a pre-defined buy level and collect premium while you wait.

Weekly and daily price charts for netflix (NFLX) showing a recent pullback and a reference level around the low 80s.
This case study focuses on a potential entry level around $82, a price area the market has reacted to before. Source: © Saxo

Why netflix is in focus this week

Netflix reports earnings this week. When a company reports, investors quickly reassess expectations for the months ahead, which is why earnings weeks can bring larger-than-usual moves.

If you are a long-term investor, it helps to be clear about what you want. If you would happily own netflix at a lower price, a cash-secured put can be a structured way to express that view. If you would not want to own the shares after a disappointing report, this strategy is usually not suitable.


A quick explanation: what “expected move” means

Around earnings, options often become more expensive because investors pay more for protection and because traders pay more to participate in a potential jump. One useful way to summarise what the market is implying is the expected move, a number derived from option prices.

In plain terms, the expected move is the market’s implied “typical move” for a specific period. It is not a forecast and not a maximum. The actual move can be (and usually is) smaller or larger. Investors often use it as a reference point because it reflects what buyers and sellers of options are collectively pricing in as a reasonable range of uncertainty at that moment in time.

Based on current option prices for the week that includes earnings, the options market is implying a move of roughly ±$6.03 (±6.84%) from recent price levels. That translates into an indicative range of about $94 on the upside and $82 on the downside for the earnings week.

That downside level matters for this case study because the strategy uses an $82 strike, which sits almost exactly at the implied lower bound for the earnings week.


The strategy: cash-secured put (csp)

A cash-secured put is an entry-focused options strategy. You sell a put option and receive a premium today. In return, you accept an obligation: if the stock is below the strike price at expiry, you may be assigned and must buy 100 shares at the strike.

The “cash-secured” part is the risk discipline. It means you keep enough cash aside to buy the shares if assignment happens. This strategy is therefore only suitable if you would genuinely be comfortable owning the shares at the strike level.

Trade ticket showing a cash-secured put on NFLX: sell to open the 23 jan 2026 $82 put for about $0.98 credit, with breakeven near $81.02
Example cash-secured put: you receive premium today and may buy shares at $82 if assigned. Source: © Saxo

Important note: The strategies and examples provided in this article are purely for educational purposes. They are intended to assist in shaping your thought process and should not be replicated or implemented without careful consideration. Every investor or trader must conduct their own due diligence and take into account their unique financial situation, risk tolerance, and investment objectives before making any decisions. Remember, investing in the stock market carries risk, and it's crucial to make informed decisions.


The example trade

In this example, you sell the 23 jan 2026 $82 put on NFLX for an indicative premium of $0.98 per share (about $98 per contract, before fees).

  • That premium is the maximum profit. In exchange, you should be prepared to buy 100 shares at $82 if you are assigned, which is $8,200 of share exposure per contract.
  • If assignment happens, your effective purchase price is reduced by the premium you received. Your breakeven is $82.00 − $0.98 = $81.02.

If the option expires worthless, the simple return on the reserved cash is about $98 / $8,200 ≈ 1.20% over roughly eight days. This is a single-trade illustration. Earnings-week premiums are often elevated, so this is not a reliable “weekly income” expectation.

Why the $82 strike is the centre of this case study

The strike selection needs to be explainable in plain language, especially around earnings.

  1. First, it lines up with the market-implied downside range. In the expected-move snapshot, the implied lower bound is about $82.02, which is very close to the $82 strike.
  2. Second, it is a level you can justify visually. The price chart shows a prior reaction area in the low 80s. This does not guarantee support. It simply provides a reasonable reference for an investor who is deciding where they would be comfortable owning the shares.
  3. Third, this strike sits in a part of the option chain with meaningful open interest. Open interest refers to the number of outstanding option contracts that are currently open, and higher open interest often indicates stronger participation and liquidity at a given strike. In this case, the $82 strike benefits from existing open interest and also sits below the $85 strike, which shows particularly large open interest in the chain. That concentration can sometimes act as a short-term “speedbump” around expiry, as hedging and position management activity near heavily traded strikes can influence price behaviour.

It is important to stress that these three points are context, not assurance. Option-implied ranges, chart levels and open interest can help explain why a strike is chosen, but they do not guarantee that a price will hold, especially around earnings. Unexpected news or guidance can still push the share price well beyond these reference levels, which is why a cash-secured put should only be used if you are genuinely comfortable owning the shares after such a move: 

A useful rule for beginners is to treat the strike as a decision, not a prediction: “I would own this stock at this level.”

NFLX option chain with the 23 jan 2026 $82 put highlighted, showing bid near $0.95 and ask near $0.98 and delta around -0.19
The highlighted $82 put shows the market price for downside insurance into earnings week. Source: © Saxo

Three outcomes at expiry

1) NFLX closes at or above $82

  • the put expires worthless
  • you keep the premium: +$98
  • no shares are purchased

2) NFLX closes between $82 and $81.02

  • you may be assigned and buy 100 shares at $82
  • because you received $0.98 premium, your position is near breakeven

Example at $81:

  • option value at expiry: $82 − $81 = $1.00
  • profit/loss: $0.98 − $1.00 = −$0.02 per share (about −$2 per contract)

3) NFLX closes below $81.02

  • you may be assigned and you own 100 shares
  • losses can grow, similar to owning the shares from $81.02 downward

Example at $75:

  • option value at expiry: $82 − $75 = $7.00
  • profit/loss: $0.98 − $7.00 = −$6.02 per share (about −$602 per contract)


Key risks and practical considerations

The main risk is an earnings gap that is larger than the expected move. The expected move is an implied estimate, not a cap. If the stock falls sharply, your short put can be assigned and you will own 100 shares at the strike.

It also helps to treat assignment as a possible outcome from the start. If you would be unhappy owning the shares, a cash-secured put is usually the wrong tool.

Finally, keep the “cash-secured” discipline. On the Saxo platform, selling a put does not require posting the full share value as margin upfront. However, the conservative and educational approach is still to behave as if you must be able to fund the full share purchase if assignment occurs. Because option prices can widen around earnings, using limit orders rather than market orders is also sensible.


What to watch in the earnings update

From an investor perspective, the most important parts of an earnings update are typically the forward-looking signals. Pay attention to guidance for the next quarter and the year ahead, how operating margin and free cash flow are trending, and any commentary on advertising progress and engagement.


Conclusion

A cash-secured put can be a structured way to approach earnings week if you like netflix long term but prefer to buy at a lower price.
In this case study, the $82 strike is not presented as “safe”. it is presented as a deliberate entry level that sits near the market-implied downside boundary for the earnings week, with a breakeven near $81.02 after premium.

If you would not be comfortable owning NFLX after a disappointing report, this is not an appropriate strategy.


FAQ

  • Do i need to own NFLX shares first? no. a cash-secured put is often used as an alternative to placing a buy limit order.
  • How much cash do i need? for 1 contract, you should be prepared to buy 100 shares: strike × 100. here: $8,200.
  • What happens if the stock falls below the strike? you may be assigned and buy 100 shares at $82. your effective cost basis becomes about $81.02 after the premium.
  • Can i exit before expiry? yes. you can buy back the put to close. the price will depend on the stock move and implied volatility.
  • Is the expected move a guarantee? no. it is an estimate implied by option prices, and the actual move can be larger or smaller.
This content is marketing material and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.
The Author is permitted to wait at least 24 hours from the time of the publication before they trade the instruments themselves.
The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options.
This content will not be changed or subject to review after publication.
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