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Cardinal Health — Model a full Wheel cycle: CSP entry, assignment, and CC exit
Cardinal Health (CAH) operates in the Health Care sector and has actively traded listed options. Entry requires ~$21,400 per contract — sell the CSP at a strike where ownership is acceptable. VRP at +11.8pp means implied vol overstates actual movement. IV Rank 39.6% puts premiums above the historical median. Viable — the statistical edge supports opening the wheel now. If assigned, rotate into covered calls to offset cost basis. See Covered Call for strike comparisons.
Wheel Cycle
Capital: ~$21,413Unfavorable — 1 condition flagged
The Wheel strategy cycles between selling puts and covered calls. This page evaluates whether the current setup favors starting a Wheel position on this ticker.
Check if you'd be comfortable owning the stock at the put strike — that's the key Wheel decision.
Combines: capital requirement, IV Rank, VRP, signal strength, premium environment, liquidityStock price (for capital calc), IV Rank, VRP, bid-ask spreads, open interest
ORATS options data + VolRadar signal composite
The Wheel requires willingness to own shares at the put strike. Assignment risk is real — stock can drop significantly below your strike. Capital requirements vary with stock price.
After assignment on your cash secured put, the options wheel transitions to selling covered calls. These are the best current covered call opportunities to reduce cost basis:
Already own CAH shares from a cash secured put assignment? These covered call and hedge strategies work with your existing position to generate income or protect gains.
Own shares + sell OTM call — generate income from existing position.
Same as Short Put but with full cash to buy shares at strike if assigned.
Buy deep ITM LEAPS call + sell short-term OTM call — like covered call but less capital.
Quantitative screening, not investment advice. Verify with your broker. Disclaimer
The wheel on Cardinal Health starts with selling a cash-secured put at approximately 5% OTM. At the current price, a single contract requires $20,300 in collateral. For higher-priced underlyings, position sizing becomes critical — the 5% rule (no single wheel exceeding 5% of total account) helps manage concentration risk. Consider put credit spreads as a defined-risk alternative if capital requirements are too high.
Cardinal Health's current signal is weak, suggesting conditions are unfavorable for new wheel entries. Options may be fairly priced or underpriced relative to expected movement. Consider waiting for the signal to improve, or if already in a wheel cycle, manage existing positions conservatively with wider strikes.
The covered-call leg shows a bid-ask spread of 13.2% on the top strike. For the wheel to work efficiently, both CSP and CC legs need tight bid-ask spreads. Wide spreads erode premium on every cycle — compounding over multiple wheel rotations. Use limit orders and verify that spread costs do not exceed 10-15% of the premium collected per leg. If fills are consistently poor, consider more liquid alternatives.
Free embeddable tool: Wheel Calculator — add wheel strategy analysis to any site. No signup, no API key.
All P/L calculations exclude commissions, fees, and slippage. Premiums are model estimates (not live quotes) — verify with broker. Actual returns may differ significantly.
100 shares × $203 strike · On margin (~20%): ~$4,060
Sell call at or above cost basis ($197.05) to ensure profit if called away.
Assumes assignment at expiration. American-style options may be assigned early, especially near ex-dividend dates or deep ITM.
Cash-secured: $20,300 per contract (100 shares x $203 strike). On margin (~20% requirement): approximately $4,060. Follow the 5% rule — no single wheel position should exceed 5% of your total account.
Most wheel traders sell puts 5–10% below current price (0.20–0.30 delta). For CAH at $214.13, that means selling puts around $203–$193. In higher IV environments, you can sell further OTM while still collecting meaningful premium.
If assigned, you buy 100 shares at the put strike price. Your effective cost basis equals the strike minus premium collected (e.g., $203 - premium). Move to Phase 2: sell covered calls at or above your cost basis. Each call premium further reduces your cost basis.
Annualized returns vary with IV conditions. With current VRP of +11.8pp, the premium environment is strong for CAH. Under favorable conditions, experienced wheel traders may target 15–30% annualized. Conservative 5% OTM strikes with 30–45 DTE tend to yield 12–20% annualized in normal conditions. The key variables are IV Rank (higher = richer premiums), strike distance (closer = more premium but higher assignment risk), and DTE (30–45 days is the theta decay sweet spot).
The biggest risk is assignment into a declining stock. If Cardinal Health drops sharply below your put strike, you own 100 shares at a loss — and subsequent covered calls may not generate enough premium to recover before the stock falls further. At Cardinal Health's current price of $214.13, assignment means holding $20,300 in a single position. To manage this: size each wheel to no more than 5% of your account, avoid selling CSPs into earnings, and confirm a positive VRP edge before entering.
Cardinal Health currently shows weak conditions for premium selling. Consider waiting for the signal to improve before starting a new wheel. If already in a wheel cycle, manage existing positions conservatively.
The covered-call leg shows a bid-ask spread of 13.2% with 67 open interest. The wheel involves repeated CSP and CC cycles, so spread costs compound — verify that slippage does not exceed 10-15% of the premium per leg. Use limit orders and consider whether Cardinal Health's chain supports efficient rolling between cycles.