Protective Put

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

An options strategy combining long stock ownership with purchasing put options on the same stock, creating downside protection. The put gives the owner the right to sell shares at the strike price, establishing a price floor. The premium paid for the put reduces overall returns but limits maximum loss, functioning like portfolio insurance. Suitable for investors holding appreciated stock who want downside protection without selling.

Example

An investor owns 100 shares of XYZ stock purchased at $40, now trading at $60. Concerned about a potential market decline but unwilling to sell and trigger capital gains taxes, the investor buys a put option with a $55 strike price for a $3 premium. If XYZ falls to $45, the investor exercises the put and sells at $55, limiting the loss to $8 per share ($60 - $55 + $3 premium) instead of the $15 loss without protection. If XYZ rises to $70, the put expires worthless, but the investor keeps the stock gains minus the $3 premium cost.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse protective puts with covered calls. A protective put involves buying a put for downside protection (insurance), while a covered call involves selling a call for income generation (limited protection). Another common error is not accounting for the premium cost when calculating maximum loss: the protection comes at a price that reduces overall returns. Many also confuse this with buying puts as a speculative bearish bet; protective puts require owning the underlying stock.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying when a protective put is suitable based on client objectives (protection vs speculation)
  • Calculating maximum loss for a protective put position (stock purchase price - strike price + premium)
  • Determining breakeven points for protective put strategies at expiration
  • Understanding that protective puts provide insurance against downside risk while maintaining upside potential
  • Comparing protective puts to covered calls in terms of protection, cost, and suitability

Example Exam Questions

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

Question 1

Maria, age 58, owns 500 shares of ABC technology stock that she purchased 8 years ago at $25 per share. The stock now trades at $95 per share, representing a substantial unrealized gain. Maria is concerned about potential market volatility over the next 6 months but does not want to sell and trigger capital gains taxes. She has a moderate risk tolerance and wants to protect her gains while maintaining upside potential. Which strategy is most appropriate?

Question 2

Which statement accurately describes the components of a protective put strategy?

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Question 3

An investor owns 100 shares of DEF stock purchased at $60 per share. The stock currently trades at $75. Concerned about a potential decline, the investor buys a protective put with a $50 strike price, paying a $4 premium per share. What is the maximum possible loss per share on this protected position?

Question 4

All of the following statements about protective put strategies are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investor owns 200 shares of tech stock purchased at $80 per share, now trading at $120. The investor is concerned about a potential correction but wants to maintain the position long-term. The investor is considering a protective put with a $110 strike price. Which of the following statements about this protective put strategy are accurate?

1. The put will protect against losses if the stock falls below $110
2. The investor maintains full participation in any upside above the current $120 price
3. The premium paid for the put will reduce the breakeven point on the original stock purchase
4. This strategy is more suitable than a covered call if the investor wants unlimited upside potential

💡 Memory Aid

Think of a protective put as homeowner's insurance for your stock: You own the house (long stock), and you buy insurance (long put) that guarantees you can sell at a minimum price (strike price = insured value) if disaster strikes. The insurance costs a premium (reduces your returns), but you still get unlimited upside if your home appreciates. If the house burns down (stock crashes), your loss is limited to the deductible (purchase price - strike price + premium).

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

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