Cisco Systems Stock Is in a Trading Range - Good For Shorting Puts and Calls
Cisco Systems Stock Is in a Trading Range - Good For Shorting Puts and Calls.
The above button links to Coinbase. Yahoo Finance is not a broker-dealer or investment adviser and does not offer securities or cryptocurrencies for sale or facilitate trading. Coinbase pays us for certain activity generated through this link. Prices displayed are informational.
Cisco Systems (CSCO) stock has been roughly flat for the past month. I suggested shorting OTM puts and calls in a June 19 Barchart article, which has worked well. It's time to repeat this play.
CSCO closed Monday, July 13, at $119.25 . That's close to where it was on June 18 ($119.54). But since then, analysts have raised their price targets. That could help push CSCO higher next month when it reports earnings on August 12.
Netflix Stock is at New Lows, But Its FCF Is Strong - Is NFLX Too Cheap?
Wheat's Bullish Fundamentals Are Growing—So Why Do Prices Keep Falling?
Applied Materials Shows Huge Unusual Put Options Activity - a Bullish Signal
In my last article, I estimated a 12-month price target (PT) of $139.12 . That was based on the company's strong free cash flow prospects. It hasn't changed much since then.
However, analysts have raised their PTs closer to mine. For example, Yahoo! Finance now shows that the average PT is $127.18, up from $126.05, and $117.95 a month before. And Barchart's mean survey PT is now $129.23.
Most of these analysts are not likely to change their outlook much until the next earnings release on Aug. 12.
This means that investors can probably make more money shorting out-of-the-money puts and calls over the next month.
I suggested shorting the $130 call and the $110 put options expiring this Friday, July 17, in my June 19 Barchart article, " Shorting Out-of-the-Money Cisco Puts and Calls Provides Shareholders Extra Income ."
At the time, CSCO closed at $119.54 on June 18, so both of these options were "out-of-the-money" - i.e., they were in no danger of being exercised. As a result, the short-seller collected both premiums and had little concern.
The short-put premium was 1.23% (i.e., $1.35/$110.00), and the short-call yield (on a covered call basis) was 1.24% (i.e., $1.48/$119.54).
As of Monday, July 13, the put premium has fallen to just 18 cents and is still 7.76% out-of-the-money. The delta ratio is just -0.062, so it's likely to expire worthless, as hoped by the short-seller, by Friday. That makes this a successful short-put play over the last month.
Similarly, the $130.00 call short play premium is now down to just 11 cents (at the midpoint), with a low 4.40% delta ratio. It's also likely to expire worthless on Friday.
So, it makes sense now for an investor to close out the play (or let them expire unassigned on Friday), to short new one-month puts and calls.
Look at the option period expiring August 14, 2026, a month away. The same strike prices have higher premiums and yields compared to last month.
For example, the $130.00 call option, 9.01% higher than Monday's close, has a midpoint premium of $3.43 , compared to $1.48 last month. That gives covered call investors a one-month yield of 2.876% , or over twice last month's 1.24% yield:
