Outrageous Predictions
Révolution Verte en Suisse : un projet de CHF 30 milliards d’ici 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Investment and Options Strategist
Résumé: Micron just had a sharp rally - and if you own 100 shares, you have a decision to make. Selling everything may feel too final. Holding without a plan may feel careless after such a large move. A covered call can sit right between those two choices ...
When shares have already moved sharply, a covered call can turn hesitation into a plan.

A strong rally feels rewarding, but it can also make investors hesitate. Selling all shares may feel too final. Holding without a plan may feel careless after such a large move.
A covered call can sit between those choices. It lets the investor keep the shares for now, receive income upfront, and set a possible future sale price above the current market.
The key question is simple: would you be comfortable selling 100 Micron shares at USD 1,100 before earnings?
A covered call combines two parts: owning shares and selling a call option against those shares.
A call option gives the buyer the right to buy shares at a fixed price, called the strike price. When you sell the call, you receive a premium. In exchange, you may have to sell your shares at the strike price if the option is exercised.
The strategy is called “covered” because the investor already owns the shares that may need to be delivered. For US equity options, one standard contract usually covers 100 shares.
For a buy-and-hold investor, the simplest way to view a covered call is this: it is a planned sale price with income attached.
Using current option data, Micron is trading around USD 914.50. The investor owns 100 shares and sells one Micron call option with the following terms:
The USD 1,100 strike is well above the current share price. The investor is not selling today. They are agreeing to sell later, but only if Micron rises above the strike before the 18 June expiry.

The 18 June 2026 USD 1,100 call shows a premium around USD 37.40 per share, or about USD 3,740 for 1 standard contract. Source: SaxoTrader (snapshot 27 May 2026)
If Micron remains below USD 1,100 at expiry, the call should expire worthless. The investor keeps the shares and keeps the premium. The income would be about USD 3,740 before costs and taxes. Compared with a 100-share position worth around USD 91,450, that equals roughly 4.1% of the share position value. The effective downside break-even shifts from USD 914.50 to about USD 877.10 – the current price minus the USD 37.40 premium received.
If Micron trades above USD 1,100 at expiry, the shares may be called away. The investor may have to sell 100 shares at the strike price. The gain from USD 914.50 to USD 1,100 would be USD 185.50 per share, or USD 18,550 for 100 shares. Adding the USD 3,740 premium gives a total gain of about USD 22,290 before costs and taxes. The effective sale level is USD 1,137.40 – the USD 1,100 strike plus the USD 37.40 premium. If Micron rises far above USD 1,100, the covered call seller will not benefit from that extra upside.
If Micron falls, the premium provides a small cushion. The USD 37.40 premium lowers the effective holding cost from USD 914.50 to about USD 877.10. Below that level, the investor still has normal shareholder downside. A covered call is not strong downside protection – it is primarily an income strategy with a limited buffer. In the extreme case of the shares falling to zero, the loss measured from the current share price would be about USD 87,710 before costs and taxes: the USD 91,450 share position minus the USD 3,740 premium received.

Covered call strategy ticket and risk graph] Caption: The covered call receives premium upfront, but the upside is capped if Micron rises above the strike price. Source: SaxoTrader (snapshot 27 May 2026)
The 18 June expiry comes before Micron’s expected 24 June earnings date. That makes the timing important.
An option expiring after earnings may offer more premium. That can look tempting, especially after a big rally. But higher premium usually reflects higher expected risk. Earnings can trigger sharp price moves in either direction. For a first-time covered call seller, that can make the position harder to manage and the outcome less predictable.
This is why the expiry before earnings may be a cleaner choice for investors approaching covered calls for the first time. It allows the investor to generate income and set a possible exit level before the main event risk arrives.
This covered call may fit an investor who already owns 100 Micron shares, has benefited from the rally, and would be comfortable selling at USD 1,100 before earnings.
It may not fit an investor who wants to hold Micron through earnings at all costs, or who would regret missing further upside above USD 1,100.
The strike should not be chosen because the premium looks attractive. It should be chosen because the sale price is acceptable.
A covered call can help Micron shareholders turn a strong rally into a more deliberate plan. It creates income today, sets a possible sale price above the current market, and avoids carrying the short call through the expected earnings release.
But it is not free money. The investor accepts capped upside, possible assignment, and continued downside exposure as a shareholder.
For long-term investors, that is the right way to think about it. A covered call is not about finding the perfect top. It is about deciding in advance what outcome you can live with.
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