Leveraged ETF

PILL

PILL · ETF ·
Live Price
Change
52W High
52W Low

PILL Key Data

Symbol
PILL
Name
PILL
Type
Leveraged ETF
Sector
ETF
Industry
Exchange
NASDAQ / NYSE
Live Price
Loading...
Market Cap
52-Week High
52-Week Low
Strategy
Covered Calls
Access
Free Trial

About PILL

PILL is a exchange-traded fund commonly used in covered call strategies to generate consistent income from existing positions.

PILL Covered Call Strategy

Covered calls on leveraged ETFs like PILL are an advanced strategy. Because PILL experiences accelerated decay and high daily volatility, selling covered calls can help offset the time-decay costs while holding the position. Short-dated calls (1-7 DTE) typically offer the best premium-to-risk ratio on leveraged instruments.

Leveraged ETFs decay over time due to daily rebalancing. Covered calls can help offset this cost, but understand the underlying mechanics before trading.

How to Run a Covered Call on PILL

01
Own 100 Shares
You must own at least 100 shares of PILL to sell 1 covered call contract. Each options contract covers exactly 100 shares.
02
Choose Strike and Expiry
Select a call strike above the current PILL price (OTM) and an expiry date. 30–45 DTE monthly cycles are most popular for income generation.
03
Sell the Call
Sell 1 call contract to collect the premium immediately into your account. This income is yours regardless of what PILL does next.
04
Manage at Expiry
If PILL stays below your strike, the option expires worthless and you keep the premium. If it rises above, shares get called away at the strike.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sell covered calls on PILL?
Yes, PILL has listed options. You need to own 100 shares per contract. Use our screener to find the best strikes and expiries based on your goals.
What strike should I choose for PILL covered calls?
Most income traders choose strikes 2–10% above the current PILL price (OTM), balancing premium income with allowing some upside. The ideal strike depends on your income vs. upside tradeoff.
What is the best expiry for PILL covered calls?
Monthly options (30–45 DTE) have the best time-decay characteristics for covered call sellers. Weekly options on PILL offer more flexibility but require more active management.
How much premium can I collect on PILL covered calls?
Premium depends on PILL's implied volatility (IV), your chosen strike distance, and days to expiry. Higher IV means more premium. Use CoveredCalls.live to see real-time premiums and annualized returns for PILL.
What happens if PILL rises above my strike?
Your shares get called away at the strike price. You keep the premium collected plus any gain from your cost basis to the strike. You can then buy shares back and repeat the strategy.

Screen the Best PILL Covered Calls Right Now

Our screener scans PILL options every few minutes and ranks setups by annualized return, downside protection, and bid-ask spread quality.

Start Free Trial →