Cash-Secured Puts Explained (Beginner-Friendly Guide)
A cash-secured put (CSP) is a commonly discussed options strategy where an investor sells a put while holding enough cash to potentially buy shares if assigned. This guide explains how it works and the risks involved.
What is a cash-secured put?
A cash-secured put typically means:
- You sell (write) a put option.
- You hold enough cash to buy 100 shares at the strike price if assigned.
In exchange for selling the put, you receive a premium. If the stock falls below the strike price by expiration, you may be assigned and required to buy shares.
Why people use cash-secured puts
- Potential entry: You’re willing to buy shares, but prefer to buy at a lower effective price.
- Income: Premium collected can generate cash flow (while waiting).
- Neutral-to-mildly-bullish view: Often used when you don’t expect a major drop.
How it works (step-by-step)
- Choose an underlying you’d be comfortable owning.
- Select a strike price where you’d be willing to buy shares.
- Hold enough cash to cover assignment (strike × 100 shares).
- Sell 1 put contract and collect premium.
Possible outcomes
Outcome A: Stock stays above strike
The put may expire worthless. You typically keep the premium.
Outcome B: Stock falls below strike
You may be assigned and buy 100 shares at the strike price. Your effective entry is often described as: strike − premium received.
Outcome C: Stock drops sharply
You may still be assigned, but the stock could be far below your effective entry. This is the scenario beginners often underestimate: CSPs still carry real downside risk.
Risks and tradeoffs
Downside risk remains
If the stock falls meaningfully, your position can lose money. Premium reduces downside slightly but does not prevent losses.
You may be assigned sooner than expected
Assignment mechanics vary by broker and contract behavior. Be prepared for owning shares if you sell CSPs.
Opportunity cost
Your cash is “reserved” for assignment. If the market rallies sharply, you may miss other opportunities.
When it tends to work / fail
Tends to work better when
- You truly want to own the shares at that level.
- The stock is stable or slowly rising.
- Implied volatility is elevated (premiums richer).
Can fail when
- The stock drops sharply (premium doesn’t offset the fall).
- You sell puts on a stock you don’t want to own.
FAQ
Is a cash-secured put “conservative”?
It can be more conservative than some strategies, but it still has downside risk because you can be forced to buy shares during a decline.
Do I need the full cash amount upfront?
The “cash-secured” concept implies you have enough funds available to cover assignment (strike × 100 shares), though broker rules can vary.
What should I read next?
See Options Greeks to understand time/volatility effects, and Covered Calls for another widely used strategy.
Important disclaimer
This content is for educational purposes only and does not provide trading or investment advice. Options involve risk and are not suitable for all investors.