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Cash Secured Puts 103: Selecting the Strike

Which strike should you sell? ATM for max income? OTM for safety? We introduce "Delta" as your probability compass.

Feb 18, 20269 min read

Delta: The Probability Gauge

Delta is not just a sensitivity metric; it is a rough proxy for "Probability of expiring In-The-Money".

-0.50 Delta (ATM): 50% chance of assignment. Max Premium.

-0.30 Delta (OTM): ~30% chance of assignment. The "Standard" choice.

-0.10 Delta (Deep OTM): ~10% chance of assignment. High win rate, low income.

The Sweet Spot: Most pros target -0.30 Delta (approx 70% probability of profit) at 30-45 days to expiration.

Implied Volatility (IV) & Skew

Not all 30 Deltas are equal. You want to sell when IV is HIGH.

Put Skew: The market is typically more afraid of a crash than a rally. Institutions buy OTM Puts as "Crash Insurance".

Therefore, OTM Puts trade at higher IVs (and higher prices) than equidistant OTM Calls. This "Fear Premium" means put sellers are structurally overpaid over the long run.

Days to Expiration (DTE)

Why 30-45 days? Because of Theta (Time Decay).

Option value decay accelerates in the final 45 days. By selling the 45-day put and buying it back at 21 days, you capture the steepest part of the decay curve while avoiding the "Gamma Risk" of expiration week.

Key takeaways

  • Use Delta to choose your risk level (-0.30 is standard).
  • Sell into High IV environments to capture the "Fear Premium".
  • The 30-45 DTE window offers the best balance of Theta decay and stability.
  • Avoid holding until expiration day (Gamma Risk) unless you WANT assignment.

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