đź’° Make Your Own Machine Part 4: What Is a Covered Call? (Plain English Edition)

Alright, now we’re getting to the good stuff.

You’ve got a brokerage account. You’ve bought your first stock (maybe even RUM). You’re feeling like a grown-up investor.

Now it’s time to do something that most investors never do:

Make money from your stock every single week — without selling it.

Welcome to the magical world of covered calls.


🛠️ So What’s a Covered Call?

Here’s the simplest version:

A covered call is when you “rent out” your stock to someone else, and they pay you for the privilege.

You’re not giving up your shares (unless they hit a certain price), and you get paid just for agreeing to sell them if that happens.

It’s like this:

“Hey, I’ll let you maybe buy my stock from me for $10 next week — but only if it hits that price. Pay me $15 upfront just for the option.”

If the stock never hits $10? You keep your shares and the $15.

If it does? You sell it for $10 and still keep the $15.

Either way, you win.


đź§€ Real-World Analogy: Cheese and Rent

Imagine you own a block of cheese (just go with it).

Your neighbor says:

“Hey, I might want to buy your cheese next Friday for $10. But I’m not sure yet. Here’s $1 just for the option.”

  • If cheese never hits $10, you keep it — plus the dollar.
  • If cheese shoots to $12, he can buy it from you for $10 — but you still keep the dollar.

That $1 is your premium. That’s the covered call income.

Now replace “cheese” with RUM stock and boom — that’s what we’re doing.


🧠 Why It’s Called a “Covered Call”

Let’s break it down:

  • Call option = a contract giving someone the option (not obligation) to buy your shares at a set price.
  • Covered = you already own the shares you’re selling the option on.

It’s safe. It’s conservative. It’s not some naked YOLO gamble. You’re the landlord, not the tenant.


đź’¸ Why This Is Awesome

Here’s what makes covered calls perfect for normal people like you and me:

  • You get paid weekly or monthly, even if the stock doesn’t move.
  • You reduce your cost basis (you’re getting paid back over time).
  • You can reinvest the premium to buy more shares.
  • You’re not betting — you’re managing risk and building ownership.

This is the heart of the FIRE Engine â€” we’re stacking shares and making weekly income to grow our position over time.


🧮 Example: Let’s Say You Own 100 Shares of RUM

  • RUM is trading at $7.80.
  • You sell a $9 call that expires next Friday.
  • You get $15 in premium up front.

What happens next?

ScenarioOutcome
RUM stays under $9You keep your shares + the $15
RUM hits $9+You sell your shares at $9 (profit!) + keep the $15

Either way, that $15 is yours no matter what.


đź§  Bottom Line

A covered call lets you rent out your stock for weekly income.
You’re not day-trading. You’re not gambling.
You’re building a passive income engine — one share, one premium at a time.


👉 Up Next: [Post 5: How Covered Calls Actually Make You Money (with Real Numbers)]
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