Covered CallRIVN · USRisk: Low

Covered Call on Rivian Automotive Inc.

Complete example: Covered Call on Rivian (RIVN) — including strikes, premium, break-even, and interactive payoff diagram.

Market view
Neutral to mildly bullish
Complexity
Beginner
Sector
Auto
Typical price
$14,00
Underlying

Rivian Automotive Inc. for Options Traders

Rivian Automotive is a US electric-vehicle maker (R1T, R1S) and a pronounced retail favorite with very high volatility (IV 60-100%). The low share price makes option contracts cheap, while production figures, cash burn and partnerships (including Volkswagen) drive sharp swings. Suitable only for experienced traders and exclusively with defined-risk profiles (spreads).

Symbol
RIVN
Market
US
IV range
60100%
Currency
USD
Options note: Nasdaq-listed; high retail options volume; weekly expirations; American-style; tight strikes in $0.50/$1 increments.
Overview

Covered Call — Quick Overview

In a covered call, you sell a call option against shares you already own. You immediately receive a premium credited to your account, regardless of how the stock moves. In return, you agree to sell your shares at the strike price if the option goes in-the-money at expiration. This strategy is ideal for investors who want to generate regular income from existing positions in flat to mildly rising markets.

Advantages

  • Immediate cash flow from premium received
  • Effectively reduces the cost basis of the stock
  • Maximum loss clearly defined (stock can only fall to zero)
  • Simple to implement — ideal for options beginners

Disadvantages

  • Caps upside: profit potential above the strike is surrendered
  • No full downside protection if the stock falls sharply
  • Dividend rights remain but early assignment risk around ex-dividend date
  • Eurex options on DAX stocks often less liquid than US options
Example Trade

Covered Call on Rivian

Illustrative example based on a typical Rivian price of $14,00. Strikes and premiums are indicative — actual market prices will vary.

PositionTypeStrikeActionPremium
100 Shares (held)Stock position$14,00Long (entry price)
Short Call (sold)Call$14,50Sell (credit)+$0,21
Net credit received+$0,21 ($21 per contract)
Max Profit
$71
per contract
Max Loss
-$1.379
per contract
Break-even
$13,79
Payoff

Payoff Diagram at Expiration

Profit and loss of the Covered Call on Rivian depending on the price at expiration. Values per contract (100 shares).

Suitability

Why Covered Call for Rivian?

Extremely high IV generates exceptional covered call premiums — sometimes 5-10% of the stock price per month. At the same time, the stock can correct 20-30% in a short time, and the covered call provides only limited protection. For extremely volatile underlyings, very conservative OTM strikes (10-15% above price) and short terms of 7-14 days are recommended.

When is the right time?

  • 1IV Rank above 30% — higher IV means richer premiums
  • 2Neutral to mildly bullish outlook on the underlying
  • 3Already holding a stock position in the account
  • 4Willingness to sell shares if the stock rallies to the strike
  • 5No upcoming earnings event within the option term
Deep Dive

Why Rivian for Options Traders

Rivian is a US electric-vehicle maker (R1T, R1S) and a pronounced retail favorite with very high volatility (IV 60-100%). The low share price keeps option contracts cheap and attracts many retail traders. For options traders Rivian is a pure volatility and speculation name: high premiums, but also the risk of violent swings on production figures, cash-burn reports and partnership news. Defined-risk structures (spreads) are practically mandatory here.

Historical Context

Historical Context

Rivian went public in late 2021 with one of the largest valuations in recent market history, then fell heavily as the production ramp and high cash burn dampened the initial euphoria. Since then the stock has swung in wide ranges and reacts sharply to quarterly delivery figures, capital measures and strategic partnerships (including with Volkswagen). The durably high IV reflects uncertainty about the path to profitability — a typical profile for a high-growth but still loss-making sector name.

FAQ

FAQ: Covered Call on Rivian

Why are Rivian options so cheap?
The absolute contract price is low because the share price is low — an option on a $14 stock costs nominally less than one on a $300 stock. That is misleading, though: relative to price, implied volatility at 60-100% is very high. You are paying a lot in percentage terms. This content is informational, not investment advice.
Is Rivian suitable for beginners?
Only with defined-risk structures and small position sizes. The very high volatility can make naked options worthless quickly or lead to large losses. Beginners who want to trade Rivian should stick to bull call spreads or clearly capped strategies and never risk more than a small part of the portfolio. This content is informational only.
What moves the Rivian price the most?
The biggest drivers are quarterly delivery and production figures, cash burn and capital raises, and strategic partnerships (such as the Volkswagen joint venture). Any of these can move the stock by double digits. IV rises further around these dates — an important factor for timing options strategies.
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Want to try this strategy yourself?

Use our free options tools for your own calculations — or discover more strategies on Rivian and other underlyings.