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Protective Put Strategy: Portfolio Insurance for Stock Investors

A protective put (also called a married put) involves owning 100 shares of a stock and buying a put option on those shares. The put acts as insurance — it limits your downside to the strike price minus the premium paid, while keeping your upside unlimited. It’s the most straightforward way to hedge a stock position.

How a Protective Put Works

You own stock and you’re worried about a short-term drop — maybe earnings are coming, or the market looks shaky. Instead of selling your position (and triggering taxes or missing a potential rebound), you buy a put option. If the stock drops below the put’s strike price, the put gains value, offsetting your stock losses.

Protective Put Example

You own 100 shares of MSFT at $420. You buy a $400 put expiring in 45 days for $8.00 ($800 total).

MSFT at ExpirationStock P&LPut ValueNet P&L (after $800 premium)
$450+$3,000$0 (expires worthless)+$2,200
$420$0$0-$800 (cost of insurance)
$412-$800$0-$1,600
$400-$2,000$0-$2,800 (max loss)
$370-$5,000+$3,000-$2,800 (max loss capped)
$350-$7,000+$5,000-$2,800 (max loss capped)

Key Levels

Protective Put Key Levels Max Loss = (Stock Price – Strike Price) + Premium Paid
Breakeven = Stock Purchase Price + Premium Paid
Max Profit = Unlimited (stock upside – premium cost)

In our example: Max loss = ($420 – $400) + $8 = $28/share ($2,800). Breakeven = $420 + $8 = $428. The stock needs to rise above $428 for you to profit overall. Below $400, your losses are completely capped at $2,800 no matter how far the stock drops.

When to Use a Protective Put

Protective puts make sense when you’re long-term bullish on a stock but want short-term protection. Common scenarios include holding through earnings announcements, ahead of Federal Reserve decisions, during market-wide uncertainty, or when you have a large concentrated position you can’t easily reduce.

The key trade-off: you pay for protection. If the stock doesn’t drop, the put expires worthless and the premium is a sunk cost — similar to paying for car insurance when you don’t have an accident.

Choosing Strike Price and Expiration

Put StrikeProtection LevelCostBest For
ATM ($420 strike)Full protection from current priceExpensive (~$12-15)Maximum protection, event risk
5% OTM ($400 strike)Protects below a 5% dropModerate (~$6-8)Most common — absorb small dip, protect big drop
10% OTM ($378 strike)Protects only against crashesCheap (~$2-4)Catastrophic risk hedge

For expiration, match the timeframe of your concern. If you’re hedging through earnings (1-2 weeks away), buy a short-dated put. If you want portfolio protection for a quarter, buy a 60-90 day put. Longer expirations cost more but give you more time for the thesis to play out.

Protective Put vs. Stop-Loss Order

FeatureProtective PutStop-Loss Order
CostPremium paid (explicit cost)Free (no upfront cost)
Downside protectionGuaranteed at strike priceNot guaranteed (gaps, slippage)
Keep the position?Yes — you keep the stockNo — stock is sold
Gap risk protectionYes — put pays off regardless of gapNo — can trigger below target
Time limitUntil expirationUntil cancelled
Tax implicationsNo sale triggered unless exercisedTriggers taxable sale event

The key advantage of a protective put over a stop-loss is that it protects against overnight gaps. If a stock drops 20% on bad earnings before the market opens, a stop-loss might execute at a much worse price. A put option pays off at the strike price regardless of the gap.

Analyst Tip
Protective puts are expensive if used continuously. A smarter approach: use them tactically around specific events (earnings, macro risk) rather than as permanent insurance. For ongoing portfolio protection, consider a collar strategy — sell a covered call to fund the cost of the protective put.

Key Takeaways

  • A protective put = own stock + buy put. It caps your downside at the strike price while keeping unlimited upside.
  • The premium is the cost of insurance — if the stock doesn’t drop, you lose the premium.
  • 5% OTM puts offer the best balance of protection and cost for most investors.
  • Protective puts beat stop-losses for gap protection — the put pays off even if the stock gaps down overnight.
  • Use protective puts tactically around events, not as permanent insurance (too expensive over time).

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a protective put the same as buying insurance?

It’s a close analogy. You pay a premium (the put cost) for protection against a specific risk (stock decline) for a defined period (until expiration). If nothing bad happens, you lose the premium — just like an insurance policy that doesn’t pay out. The main difference is that you choose your deductible (strike price) and coverage period (expiration) each time.

How much does a protective put cost?

Typically 1-5% of the stock’s value for 30-60 day puts, depending on the strike and implied volatility. ATM puts cost more; deep OTM puts are cheaper. During high-volatility periods, put prices increase significantly — exactly when you want protection most, it’s most expensive.

Can you sell the protective put before expiration?

Yes. If the stock drops and your put gains value, you can sell the put for a profit and keep the stock. You don’t have to exercise. Many investors close the put when the threat passes — capturing its value rather than letting it expire if the stock recovers.

What is a collar strategy?

A collar combines a protective put with a covered call: you own stock, buy a put (for downside protection), and sell a call (to offset the put’s cost). The call premium reduces or eliminates the cost of the put, but caps your upside. It’s a popular way to get hedging without the full premium expense.

Should I use protective puts or diversification?

Diversification is a long-term structural hedge — owning different asset classes that don’t all move together. Protective puts are tactical, short-term hedges for specific positions. Ideally, use both: diversification as your baseline risk management, and protective puts when you have event-specific concerns about a concentrated holding.