Rolling options explained, part 3: navigating events and knowing when to exit

Rolling options explained, part 3: navigating events and knowing when to exit

Options 10 minutes to read
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Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Résumé:  Rolling options around events adds complexity - but also opportunity. In part 3 of our four-part guide, we explore how earnings, dividends, and macro catalysts affect your trades, and how smart timing and clear exit logic can make all the difference.


Rolling options explained, part 3: navigating events and knowing when to exit

In the first two parts of this series, we looked at how rolling can help you adjust your positions—whether it’s a single option like a covered call or a multi-leg spread like a vertical or iron condor. We’ve seen how rolling gives you more time, flexibility, and control. But rolling doesn’t happen in a vacuum. Sometimes, the calendar matters just as much as the chart.

This third part focuses on rolling around key events—like earnings announcements, central bank decisions, or ex-dividend dates—and how to make smart decisions about when to roll, when to stay put, and when to simply exit a trade.


Why events change the game

Events inject uncertainty. That’s why implied volatility (IV) often rises in the days leading up to earnings or macro announcements. And that matters for option sellers: the higher the IV, the richer the premium—but also the greater the risk of a sudden move.

Rolling can help you adjust your exposure around these moments—but only if done with intent.

Let’s walk through a few common event-driven situations.


Earnings approaching: what to do with your position?

Let’s say you’ve sold a short put under a stock that’s about to report earnings next week. The premium is elevated because of the expected volatility, but that also means a gap—up or down—is likely.

You have a few choices:

  • 1. Close early. If you’ve already collected most of the premium (say, 70–80%), you might decide it’s not worth the risk of holding through the event.
  • 2. Roll out and away. You can move the strike further from the stock price and roll to a later expiration. This gives the trade more room and avoids the binary risk of earnings.
  • 3. Take the risk—but be intentional. If you stay in, you’re accepting the risk of a big move. That’s fine—just make sure it aligns with your goals.

What not to do? Don’t roll into earnings just to avoid closing. If the numbers no longer justify the risk, stepping aside is often the smarter move.


Ex-dividend dates and early assignment

Covered calls involve an extra layer: dividends. If you’ve sold a call option and the stock goes ex-div soon, early assignment risk becomes real—especially if your call is in-the-money and has little time value left.

In these cases:

  • Consider rolling the call up and out before the ex-div date.
  • Or close it entirely if the premium is mostly gone.

This helps you keep the shares and still capture the dividend—if that’s part of your plan.


Rolling after a big move: when the dust settles

What if you’ve just been through an earnings event or macro surprise? The position is still open, but the environment has changed.

Ask yourself:

  • Has the thesis held up?
  • Is there still good reason to be in this trade?
  • Has the drop in IV (post-event) made it harder to roll for a good credit?

If the trade survived and the outlook still fits, you might roll to lock in gains or reposition more conservatively.

But if the picture has changed—dramatically—you may want to close and move on. Rolling should never be a way to avoid making a decision.


Guidelines for exiting vs rolling

Here’s a simple decision framework:

Consider rolling if:

  • The trade is still within your thesis.
  • You can roll for a credit or small debit and improve breakeven.
  • You want to extend time or reduce risk.

Consider closing if:

  • You’ve hit 50–75% of your max profit.
  • IV is collapsing and there’s little premium left.
  • The upcoming event introduces binary risk with poor reward.
  • You’ve already rolled twice without improving the outcome.

Sometimes, exiting is the cleanest and most disciplined move.


A quick note on time stops

Profit and loss targets are common, but time-based exits are underrated. If you’ve been in a trade for a while and the price hasn’t moved—or you’ve rolled it more than once without improving the picture—it may be time to close. Opportunity cost matters.


Wrapping up

Events bring both opportunity and risk. Rolling around them can be useful—but only if done thoughtfully. In many cases, the best move isn’t to roll, but to close. That’s not giving up. That’s managing well.

In part 4 of this series, we’ll pull together everything we’ve covered and walk through a full set of frequently asked questions—real scenarios that traders face when deciding whether to roll or exit.

Related articles/content             
Rolling options explained - 01 - understanding the basics and why rolling matters
Rolling options explained - 02 - managing spreads with confidence
Rolling options explained - 03 - navigating events and knowing when to exit
Rolling options explained - 04 - frequently asked questions and real-world scenarios

Guide on long-term options for strategic portfolio management
Assignment explained - 01 - what every options trader and investor should know
Assignment explained - 02 - how to avoid assignment
Assignment explained - 03 - how to use option assignment to your advantage
Assignment explained - 04 - option assignment cheat sheet

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