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Schlumberger — Top covered call setups ranked by yield and downside protection
No covered call data available for SLB.
Data is updated daily after market close.
CC Score = Income (22%) + Safety (18%) + Liquidity (18%) + Quality (14%) + Event (12%) + IV (8%) + Execution (8%)Annualized return, delta, bid-ask spread, open interest, earnings proximity, IV rank, DTE
VolRadar proprietary composite score using ORATS chain data
CC Score optimizes for income generation, not total return. Covered calls cap upside — stocks that rally strongly will underperform a buy-and-hold approach. Past CC returns do not predict future yields.
Quantitative screening, not investment advice. Verify with your broker. Disclaimer
Covered call data for Schlumberger is updated daily after market close. When available, VolRadar ranks every strike and expiration by CC Score — a composite of income potential, safety, liquidity, and event risk — so you can compare opportunities at a glance.
VolRadar's CC Score ranks every Schlumberger covered call opportunity from 0 to 100 across seven weighted dimensions: Income potential (22%), Safety (18%), Liquidity (18%), Underlying Quality (14%), Event Safety (12%), IV Opportunity (8%), and Execution Quality (8%). The score updates daily after market close, reflecting the latest option chain data.
Covered call data for Schlumberger is updated daily after market close. Check back for the latest ranked opportunities.
For Schlumberger, delta 0.20–0.30 is a common range for covered calls. This gives 70–80% probability of the option expiring worthless while collecting meaningful premium. Lower delta (0.15–0.20) is more conservative, while 0.30–0.40 generates more income but has higher assignment probability.
The CC Score (0–100) ranks covered call opportunities across 7 dimensions: Income potential (22%), Safety (18%), Liquidity (18%), Underlying Quality (14%), Event Safety (12%), IV Opportunity (8%), and Execution Quality (8%). Higher scores mean better risk-adjusted opportunities. Sort by CC Score to find the best strike and expiration combo for Schlumberger.
Weekly covered calls (7–14 DTE) offer faster theta decay and more flexibility but require active management. Monthly covered calls (30–45 DTE) balance time premium with less frequent rolling. For Schlumberger, current elevated IV makes both viable — weeklies capture the rich premium faster. The CC Score ranks both DTE ranges so you can compare directly.
The primary risk is capped upside: if Schlumberger rallies sharply, you are obligated to sell at the strike price and miss gains above it. This risk is amplified with earnings in 18 days — a positive surprise can trigger a gap above your strike overnight, locking in the loss of upside before you can react. To contextualize: covered calls are best suited for sideways-to-mildly-bullish outlooks. If you expect a significant move higher, consider waiting to sell the call or using a wider strike. The CC Score penalizes strikes with elevated event risk to help you avoid the worst setups.
Covered call data for Schlumberger requires options with sufficient liquidity and standard expirations. If no data appears, it may be outside market hours, the ticker may have limited options activity, or data is still being processed. VolRadar updates covered call rankings daily after market close.
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