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Stanley Black & Decker — Model a full Wheel cycle: CSP entry, assignment, and CC exit
Stanley Black & Decker (SWK) is a Industrials stock with actively traded listed options. Entry requires ~$6,800 per contract — sell the CSP at a strike where ownership is acceptable. IV Rank 35% is 3pp above the Industrials sector median of 32%. 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: ~$6,772Answer the question above to complete your assessment.
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.
Already own SWK 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 Stanley Black & Decker begins with selling a cash-secured put, collecting premium while agreeing to buy 100 shares if the stock drops below your strike. At $67.72, one contract requires approximately $6,400 in cash. If assigned, Phase 2 begins: sell covered calls at or above your cost basis to recoup and profit.
Before starting a wheel on Stanley Black & Decker, confirm option chain liquidity with your broker. Check bid-ask spreads on both put and call sides for your target strikes and expirations. The wheel involves repeated cycles, so even small execution costs compound over time. Tighter spreads (under 5% of premium) and higher open interest make each rotation more efficient.
The wheel on Stanley Black & Decker follows a repeating cycle: (1) Sell a cash-secured put at a strike you are comfortable owning shares at. (2) If the put expires worthless, keep the premium and repeat. (3) If assigned, you now own 100 shares — sell covered calls at or above your cost basis. (4) Each covered call premium reduces your effective cost basis. The cycle compounds income over time, with the goal of generating consistent returns regardless of whether the stock moves up, down, or sideways.
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 × $64 strike · On margin (~20%): ~$1,280
Sell call at or above cost basis ($62.16) 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: $6,400 per contract (100 shares x $64 strike). On margin (~20% requirement): approximately $1,280. 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 SWK at $67.72, that means selling puts around $64–$61. 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., $64 - 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 +2.2pp, the premium environment is moderate for SWK. 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 Stanley Black & Decker 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 Stanley Black & Decker's current price of $67.72, assignment means holding $6,400 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.
Stanley Black & Decker shows moderate conditions — the wheel can work but prefer conservative strikes. IV Rank 35%. Consider selling 7–10% OTM rather than the standard 5% to add a margin of safety.
Option liquidity data for Stanley Black & Decker is limited. Before starting a wheel, check bid-ask spreads on both put and call sides with your broker. The wheel requires multiple cycles to compound returns, so even small execution inefficiencies add up. Highly liquid names with tight spreads and high open interest are better candidates for the wheel strategy.