Sooner or later a Put finishes in the money and you're assigned. If you've followed the course, this isn't the bad ending — it's the plan working. You set out to buy a stock you wanted at a price you chose, and now you own it.
What actually happens when you're assigned
At expiration (or sometimes earlier), the Put is exercised and you buy 100 shares per contract at the strike, using the cash you set aside. Your cost basis is the strike minus the premium you already collected. Sell the $90 Put for $3, get assigned, and you own 100 shares at an effective $87 — a discount to the $100 the stock traded at when you sold. From there the shares behave like any other holding: they can rise or fall, and the premium you kept is baked into your entry.
Assignment isn't failure
The mindset matters. "I hope I never get assigned" is the wrong frame — it means you were selling Puts on stocks you didn't actually want. The right frame is: I'm being paid to wait for a better entry, and I'm content to own the shares if I get them. Sold that way, assignment is just the occasional, expected cost of collecting premium.
The Wheel: keep getting paid
Now that you own the shares, you can run the same idea in reverse and turn one trade into a cycle — the Wheel:
- Sell a Cash-Secured Put on a stock you'd own. Collect premium.
- If assigned, you now own 100 shares at your effective cost.
- Sell a Covered Call against those shares — collect more premium, at a strike at or above your cost basis.
- If the Call is assigned, your shares are called away (sold) at the strike — back to cash.
- Return to step 1 and repeat.
You're paid on the way in (the Put), while you hold (the Call), and on the way out (the Call's strike). The Wheel Strategy calculator tracks premium, cost basis and P&L across every cycle, and the Wheel Strategy guide walks a full loop step by step. Wondering how this compares to simply holding shares long term? See Wheel Strategy vs Buy and Hold.
When the Wheel works — and when it doesn't
The Wheel shines on quality stocks and broad ETFs that pull back and recover: you collect premium through the chop and your cost basis keeps dropping. It fails on a stock in genuine decline — you get assigned, the stock keeps falling, and selling Calls below your cost basis just locks in a loss if they're assigned.
Wheeling a falling knife
Running the Wheel on a stock that's collapsing for real reasons. Assignment hands you the shares, they keep dropping, and now you're either holding a deepening loss or capping any recovery with Calls below your cost. The Wheel is not a way to fix a bad stock pick — it only works on names you'd happily hold for the long run.
Key takeaways
- Assignment means you bought the stock you wanted at the strike minus the premium — a planned outcome.
- Drop "I hope I never get assigned"; sell only on stocks you'd be glad to own.
- The Wheel turns assignment into a cycle: Put → shares → Covered Call → called away → repeat.
- It works on quality names that recover, not on a stock in real decline.