Cash-Secured PutLHA.DE · USRisk: Low

Cash-Secured Put on Deutsche Lufthansa AG

Complete example: Cash-Secured Put on Lufthansa (LHA.DE) — including strikes, premium, break-even, and interactive payoff diagram.

Market view
Neutral to mildly bullish
Complexity
Beginner
Sector
Industrials
Typical price
€6,50
Underlying

Deutsche Lufthansa AG for Options Traders

Deutsche Lufthansa AG is Germany's largest airline and a cyclical name whose price depends heavily on oil prices, travel demand, strikes and the economy (IV 30-45%). The low share price and moderate volatility make Lufthansa a popular underlying for German beginners who want to test options strategies with modest capital.

Symbol
LHA.DE
Market
US
IV range
3045%
Currency
EUR
Options note: Traded on Eurex; solid liquidity for a German mid-cap; European-style; contract size 100 shares.
Overview

Cash-Secured Put — Quick Overview

In a cash-secured put, you sell a put option on a stock you'd like to own at a lower price. You keep enough cash on hand to buy the shares if necessary. The option premium is credited to your account immediately. If the option is exercised, you buy the shares at the strike — effectively at a lower price than today (strike minus premium). If it expires worthless, you simply keep the premium.

Advantages

  • Immediate premium income regardless of price direction
  • Automatically better entry price if assigned (strike − premium)
  • Simple to understand and implement
  • Lower risk than direct stock purchase (premium cushions losses)

Disadvantages

  • Capital is tied up for the duration of the trade (opportunity cost)
  • Miss out on price increases above current price (no upside exposure)
  • Full stock loss possible if price falls sharply after assignment
  • Assignment in a sharp downturn undesirable if you no longer want to own the stock
Example Trade

Cash-Secured Put on Lufthansa

Illustrative example based on a typical Lufthansa price of €6,50. Strikes and premiums are indicative — actual market prices will vary.

PositionTypeStrikeActionPremium
Short Put (sold)Put€6,25Sell (credit)+€0,13
Net credit received+€0,13 (€13 per contract)
Max Profit
€13
per contract
Max Loss
-€612
per contract
Break-even
€6,12
Payoff

Payoff Diagram at Expiration

Profit and loss of the Cash-Secured Put on Lufthansa depending on the price at expiration. Values per contract (100 shares).

Suitability

Why Cash-Secured Put for Lufthansa?

Medium volatility offers sufficient premiums for regular cash-secured puts (1.5-2.5% monthly). Timing is more important for more volatile underlyings: open puts preferably after a price decline (elevated IV) and close at 50-75% profit. Pay particular attention to quarterly earnings and close positions before earnings.

When is the right time?

  • 1The stock would be attractive to you at a 5-10% lower price
  • 2IV Rank elevated (above 30%) for better premiums
  • 3Sufficient capital available (strike × 100 shares)
  • 4No upcoming earnings event within the term (or intentionally timed around it)
  • 5Underlying fundamentally attractive — you genuinely want to own it if assigned
Deep Dive

Why Lufthansa for Options Traders

Deutsche Lufthansa is Germany's largest airline and a cyclical name whose price depends heavily on oil prices, travel demand, strikes and the economy (IV 30-45%). The low share price and moderate volatility make Lufthansa a popular underlying for German beginners who want to test options strategies with modest capital. The options trade on Eurex (European-style, 100 shares per contract).

Strategy Notes

Cash-Secured Put on Lufthansa: Practical Notes

Cash-secured puts are a good way to acquire Lufthansa more cheaply after a macro- or oil-price-driven pullback. Given the low price, the capital requirement per contract is manageable for many accounts. The moderate IV pays solid if not spectacular premiums — a sensible, manageable introduction to the strategy for German investors.

Historical Context

Historical Context

Lufthansa is among the most cyclical DAX-adjacent names. The 2020 pandemic hit the stock hard and led to a state-backed capital measure; a recovery followed as travel demand returned. The price has for years traded in a comparatively narrow but event-driven range and reacts to oil prices, labor disputes/strikes, load factors and macro data. The moderate but not low IV makes Lufthansa an instructive practice underlying for options beginners.

FAQ

FAQ: Cash-Secured Put on Lufthansa

Why is Lufthansa a good practice underlying for beginners?
The low share price keeps capital per contract small, and the moderate volatility (IV 30-45%) keeps moves manageable — unlike high-volatility US names. In addition, the options trade on Eurex in euros, which is convenient for German investors. This content is informational, not investment advice.
What moves the Lufthansa price the most?
The most important drivers are oil prices (fuel costs), travel demand, labor disputes and strikes, and the broader economy. As a cyclical name, Lufthansa reacts clearly to recession signals and recovery phases. These events produce its moderate but noticeable volatility. This content is informational only.
How are Lufthansa options traded?
Lufthansa options trade on Eurex, European-style (exercise only at expiration), with a contract size of 100 shares. Liquidity is solid for a German mid-cap. Watch the bid-ask spreads and use limit orders. This content is informational, not investment advice.
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