I'm holding two Microsoft calls into an earnings report four days away. One has a ceiling. One doesn't. That asymmetry is entirely intentional — and here's exactly how I built it.
It started with a simple read: Microsoft had wind at its back, and I wanted maximum exposure to a continued move. I went deep in the money with the June 18 $415 call, paying $24.23 per contract.
The logic is straightforward. A deep ITM call carries a high delta — meaning it moves almost dollar-for-dollar with the stock. You're not betting on a miracle; you're riding a trend with the leverage of options and the safety net of intrinsic value. Within sixty minutes of entry, the contract hit $26.40. Nearly 9% while my coffee was still warm.
This position has no ceiling. If MSFT reports a blowout quarter and gaps to $470, every dollar above $415 is mine. At $455 it's already a $1,577 profit on a $2,423 bet. At $470, that becomes $3,077. The $415 call is my high-octane play — the one that benefits most from a genuine earnings surprise.
I also hold the June 18 $425 call, entered at $21.80. Slightly higher strike, slightly less delta, but still a strong directional bet. On its own, it's a clean swing trade. But I didn't leave it on its own.
Against the $425 long, I sold a May 1 $455 call for $304 in premium. This transforms the position from a naked long call into a bull call diagonal spread — sometimes called a Poor Man's Covered Call. The idea is elegant: I collect rent on my long position while I wait for MSFT to move.
Even though the $425 long dipped slightly on the day — from $21.80 to $21.48 — the trade as a whole is still green. The $304 I collected upfront absorbs minor fluctuations and lowers my effective cost basis. Theta is working for me on the short side while I wait for the June move.
Microsoft reports Q1 earnings on April 29th. Four days away. That single date reshapes every risk/reward calculation across both positions.
The pre-earnings period is usually kind to long call holders. Implied volatility rises as the market prices in uncertainty, inflating option premiums regardless of which direction the stock moves. My $415 call in particular — sitting deep ITM with no short leg to cap it — benefits directly from this IV expansion. I am getting paid twice: once by delta as the stock drifts higher, and once by vega as the market gets nervous.
The short $455 call expires May 1st — just 48 hours after earnings. If MSFT gaps above $455 on a blowout report, the diagonal spread hits its cap and the short leg faces assignment. The decision: do I buy back the $455 call before the 29th to uncap the trade, or accept the guaranteed $1,124 max profit and let the $415 long carry the upside?
Taken together, the two positions form what I think of as a barbell. On one end: the $425 diagonal spread, structured to deliver a reliable, hedged ~60% return if MSFT cooperates. On the other: the $415 naked long, positioned to print aggressively if earnings surprise to the upside.
If MSFT clears $455 by May 1st, the spread maxes out at $1,124 while the long call is already sitting on $1,577+ and climbing. Combined: over $2,700 in profit across both positions — on a total outlay of roughly $4,300.
If MSFT disappoints? The $304 premium on the diagonal cushions the blow. The $415 call loses ground but retains intrinsic value given how deep ITM it sits. Neither position is a lottery ticket vulnerable to total loss on a flat or slightly negative print.
Every trader with a position into earnings faces the same question: hold through the print, or take the profit now and sidestep the IV crush that follows the announcement?
For the $415 call, I'm leaning toward holding. The pre-earnings run is part of the thesis, and deep ITM options are more insulated from IV crush than OTM lottery plays. The intrinsic value floor is real.
For the $455 short leg on the diagonal — that's where I need to stay sharp. If MSFT rallies toward $450 before the 29th, I'll seriously consider buying it back to uncap the $425 long. At that point, the premium paid to close it will be expensive, but so will leaving a ceiling on a stock about to report.
The barbell is built. The earnings date is set. Now it's Satya's turn.
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