Collar Strategy

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

Options strategy combining a protective put (downside protection) with a covered call (upside limitation) on stock you already own. Typically structured to be zero-cost or low-cost, where the premium received from selling the call offsets the cost of buying the put. Caps both potential gains (above call strike) and potential losses (below put strike), creating a defined profit/loss range. Commonly used by investors with concentrated stock positions (executives, founders) who want to protect gains without triggering immediate capital gains taxes.

Example

Sarah, a tech executive, owns 10,000 shares of her company stock trading at $100 per share (total value: $1M). To protect against a market downturn while avoiding capital gains taxes, she implements a collar: (1) Buys 100 put options with a $95 strike for $3 per share ($30,000 total), providing downside protection below $95; (2) Sells 100 call options with a $110 strike for $3 per share ($30,000 total premium collected), capping upside above $110. The strategy costs zero (premium received = premium paid), limits losses to 5% ($95 floor), but also caps gains at 10% ($110 ceiling). If the stock falls to $80, Sarah can exercise her puts and sell at $95. If the stock rises to $130, her shares will be called away at $110.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse which option is bought vs sold (you BUY the put for protection, SELL the call for income). Another error is miscalculating the profit/loss limits (max loss = stock price minus put strike minus net premium; max gain = call strike minus stock price minus net premium). Many forget the collar only works if you already own the stock (covered position). Some incorrectly think collars are always zero-cost, but they can have a small net debit or credit depending on strike prices chosen. Finally, students may not recognize that collars sacrifice unlimited upside potential in exchange for downside protection.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying when a collar strategy is appropriate based on client situation (concentrated position, downside protection needed)
  • Understanding the components of a collar (long stock, long put, short call) and what each contributes
  • Calculating maximum gain and maximum loss for collar positions at various stock prices
  • Determining whether a collar is zero-cost based on premium paid vs premium received
  • Recognizing the tax efficiency advantage of collars (defer capital gains) versus selling stock outright

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Mark, a 52-year-old CFO, owns 20,000 shares of his company's stock currently trading at $80 per share, representing 70% of his $2.3M net worth. He has a very low cost basis ($15 per share) and is concerned about a potential market correction, but he doesn't want to sell and trigger $1.3M in capital gains. His investment objective is capital preservation with some growth. Which strategy would be most appropriate?

Question 2

What are the three components of a collar strategy?

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Question 3

An investor owns 100 shares of XYZ stock purchased at $50 per share. She implements a collar by buying a put with a $48 strike for $2 per share and selling a call with a $55 strike for $2 per share (zero net cost). If XYZ stock is trading at $42 at expiration, what is her profit or loss per share?

Question 4

All of the following statements about collar strategies are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investor owns 1,000 shares of ABC stock trading at $60 per share. She implements a collar by buying 10 put contracts with a $55 strike for $2 per share and selling 10 call contracts with a $70 strike for $3 per share. Which of the following statements are accurate?

1. The collar generated a net credit of $1 per share ($1,000 total)
2. The maximum potential loss is $5 per share ($5,000 total)
3. The maximum potential gain is $10 per share ($10,000 total)
4. The investor maintains unlimited upside potential above $70

💡 Memory Aid

Think of a collar on a dog: it creates a defined boundary (the dog can only go so far up or down). A collar strategy creates a profit/loss collar around your stock position. You BUY the put (floor/protection - like the bottom of the collar), SELL the call (ceiling/cap - like the top of the collar), creating a defined range. Remember: Put = Protection (downside floor), Call = Cap (upside ceiling). Typically zero-cost because call premium offsets put cost.

Related Concepts

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Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: