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Assignment explained - 01 - what every options trader and investor should know

Options 10 minutes to read
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Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Assignment explained: what every options trader and investor should know

This article is part of a four-part mini-series on option assignment—created for investors and active traders alike. Whether you're just starting out or deep into advanced strategies, understanding assignment will help you manage risk and opportunity more confidently.

This is part 1: Assignment explained.


Whether you're just starting out with options or you've been trading complex spreads for years, understanding how assignment works is a critical piece of the puzzle. And no matter your style—whether you're a long-term investor selling the occasional covered call or a short-term trader running delta-neutral strategies—the mechanics of assignment affect your positions, margin, and risk. This article is here to demystify what assignment really means, how it happens, and what you should watch for so you’re never caught off guard.

Assignment refers to what happens when the buyer of an option decides to exercise it—and you happen to be on the other side of the trade. If you sold a put, you may be assigned and required to buy shares. If you sold a call, you may need to deliver shares. That’s it. It’s not a punishment or a penalty. It’s simply the contract doing what it’s designed to do. But when it happens—especially if it’s unexpected—it can impact your portfolio and your margin in ways you should prepare for.

Before we go further, a quick note on scope: the remainder of this and the following articles focus on American-style options on individual stocks and ETFs. These can be exercised—and thus assigned—at any time before expiry. European-style options, which are typically cash-settled and tied to indexes, can only be exercised at expiration and are not subject to early assignment. Options on futures also follow different clearing rules and are not the focus of this series.


How assignment actually works

When an option holder exercises their right (to buy or sell stock), the request goes through the Options Clearing Corporation (OCC). The OCC assigns that request to a clearing firm that holds matching short positions. Then the broker allocates it to individual accounts based on their own method—typically either random selection or first-in, first-out (FIFO).

That’s why you might get assigned even if the option still has weeks to expiry. What matters isn’t the calendar—it’s the moneyness of the option and how much time value is left. Early assignment usually happens when:

  • The option is deep in the money
  • There’s very little extrinsic (time) value remaining
  • There’s a dividend coming up (for calls)

So yes—assignment can happen before expiration. Especially when you're short calls ahead of a dividend or short deep-in-the-money puts with barely any time value left.


What does this mean for investors?

For investors, the most common scenario is selling a covered call or a cash-secured put. If your stock rallies through your short call’s strike price just before it goes ex-dividend, you might be assigned early. That means your shares are called away, and you miss out on the dividend. Similarly, if you’ve sold a put and the stock drops below the strike near expiration, you might be assigned and have to buy 100 shares per contract.

The good news? That’s often exactly what investors intended. You were probably selling the put as a way to buy stock at a lower price, or the call to generate income while holding shares. Assignment, in that context, just means the contract reached its conclusion.


What about traders using spreads or multi-leg strategies?

This is where things can get a bit more complex—but not unmanageable. Let’s say you’re running a bull call spread, and your short call is assigned. Suddenly you’re short 100 shares. But you still hold the long call. That means your overall risk remains limited. You can exercise your long call to flatten the position, or you can hold both legs and let them settle. The point is: the max loss or gain hasn’t changed—only the composition of your position.

Iron condors, butterflies, strangles—any multi-leg strategy with a short option can lead to assignment. When it happens, you might end up with a mix of stock and options instead of a neat little spread. But again, your risk and payoff are usually still defined. What you do need is a plan for managing those positions after assignment, especially if holding stock changes your margin or delta exposure.


The timing of assignment

Assignment notices typically arrive the morning after exercise. If someone exercises late in the day, you’ll get the notice from your broker before the market opens the next day. The stock will appear in your account (either long or short), and your cash or buying power will adjust accordingly. That’s why it’s a good idea to manage high-risk short options before they go deep in the money—especially just before expiration or a dividend.

And then there’s the infamous “pin risk.” That’s when the underlying stock closes right near the strike price of your short option on expiration day. You don’t know whether you’ll be assigned or not, and you won’t know until Monday morning. If the option is even a few cents in the money at the close, it might be exercised.


So what should you do?

Know which positions carry assignment risk. Track your short options. Watch the time value (extrinsic) in your short calls and puts—especially those nearing expiration or sitting in-the-money. If the remaining value is just a few cents, you may want to close or roll the position to avoid surprises.

And perhaps most importantly: don’t fear assignment. It’s not a failure. It’s part of the contract. When you understand what triggers it, what it leads to, and how to handle it, you take away the stress and gain control.

Assignment is simply what happens when the market calls your bluff—or pays you the premium you were after in the first place.

This material is marketing content and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.
The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options..

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