Options Puppy Strategy My Daily PLTR Cash-Secured Put Method How I Consistently Scrap $10–$30 a Day
🐶 Options Puppy Strategy
My Daily PLTR Cash-Secured Put Method
How I Consistently Scrap $10–$30 a Day
I call this my Options Puppy Strategy because I don’t aim for big, aggressive trades. Instead, I let small, repeatable profits come to me daily—just like feeding a puppy consistently. My focus is cash-secured puts on PLTR, a stock I’m comfortable owning long term.
This strategy is not about predicting big market moves. It is about discipline, patience, and probability.
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📌 Why I Chose PLTR
I trade PLTR because:
• It has high options liquidity
• Tight bid-ask spreads
• Strong retail and institutional interest
• Enough daily movement to create premium volatility
• A stock I don’t mind owning if assigned
When selling cash-secured puts, mindset matters. I never sell puts on stocks I’m afraid to hold.
💰 What Is a Cash-Secured Put (In Simple Terms)
A cash-secured put means:
• I sell a put option
• I keep cash ready to buy the shares if assigned
• I collect premium upfront
• If PLTR stays above my strike → I keep 100% of the premium
• If PLTR drops → I buy shares at a price I already accepted
This turns volatility into income, not fear.
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📷 Real Example From My Screenshot
Looking at my PLTR trades:
• Same contract: PLTR PUT 195 strike
• Same expiry: 2026-01-02
• I repeatedly sell high and buy back lower
Example cycle:
• Sell put at $5.15
• Buy back at $5.00
• Profit: $0.15 = $15 per contract
Another:
• Sell at $5.10
• Buy back at $4.70
• Profit: $0.40 = $40
I repeat this multiple times a day or across days, depending on volatility.
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📈 Why I Close Early (Not Hold to Expiry)
Many beginners hold until expiry. I don’t.
I prefer to:
• Take 10–30 cents profit
• Close early
• Reduce risk
• Free up capital
• Re-sell the same strike again
This turns one option into multiple paydays.
Small wins compound.
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🎯 My Daily Target: $10–$30
I don’t force trades.
My rules:
• If PLTR spikes → I sell puts
• If premium contracts → I buy back
• Once I hit $10–$30, I stop
This removes greed and emotional trading.
Some days I do nothing. That’s also a win.
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🧠 Why This Works (Psychology Matters)
Most traders:
• Chase breakouts
• Over-leverage
• Trade too big
• Panic on pullbacks
I do the opposite:
• I sell fear
• I trade small
• I repeat high-probability setups
• I accept assignment risk upfront
This keeps me calm, consistent, and disciplined.
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⚠️ Risk Management (Very Important)
This strategy works only because:
• I use cash-secured positions
• I trade 1 lot
• I never over-size
• I am okay owning PLTR at the strike
No margin stress.
No forced liquidation.
No emotional damage.
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🐾 Why I Call It the “Puppy Strategy”
A puppy grows by:
• Eating a little every day
• Being consistent
• Not starving, not overeating
My strategy is the same:
• Small profits
• Repeated often
• Boring but effective
I don’t need home runs.
I need survivability and consistency.
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🔁 Final Thoughts
This is not a “get rich quick” method.
It is a get paid for patience method.
By selling cash-secured puts on PLTR:
• I turn time into income
• I reduce emotional trading
• I build consistency
• I let probability work for me
Some days it’s $10.
Some days it’s $30.
Over weeks and months, it adds up.
That’s the power of the Options Puppy Strategy 🐶📉
@Daily_Discussion @TigerStars @TigerClub @Daily_Discussion @TigerStars @MillionaireTiger
Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

how do you assess the take profit level? issit based on dollar earnings?