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$180 profit in AMGN

  • Writer: themoneyloaf
    themoneyloaf
  • Oct 2, 2025
  • 2 min read

Happy weekend!

 

One of my favorite trades is the put ratio spread like the one in this week's update in AMGN.

 

This week:

  1. $180 profit in AMGN

$180 profit in AMGN


In August I sold a $265/270 put ratio in AMGN expiring Sep 19 after it met my entry requirements for $180 in initial premium. 

 

A unique feature of a put ratio (one of the strategies I teach in my options course), is the potential to make more money than the original premium if the stock drops. 

 

The tradeoff is typically having to hold the trade a little longer, and in this case it went all the way to expiration day last Friday. 


$180 realized profit from selling a put ratio spread in AMGN

Longtime readers might remember previous AMGN put ratios coming in with more than 100% profit not once or twice but three times in the past

 

Unfortunately that didn't happen this time, but 100% of initial premium is still a great result. 

 

As always all the trades within this portfolio are updated in close to real-time to my private community (not recommendations). While I do share my own profit targets, they can of course be adjusted to meet your own risk profile as well. 

 

You can find out more about my private community at the link below. 


I know I've been saying the same thing for the last couple of weeks, but as the market grinds higher, I'm being more cautious about placing new capital to work. 

 

That said, I did manage to place one opportunistic trade this week and will update the results here when it's done. 


Have a good weekend!


 

 

  • Improve your financial life with my budget and wealth tracker that helps to allocate your budget, calculate savings rate, track your sinking funds, net worth and progresses towards FIRE with minimal input from you - most of it is automated. 

 

This article is for educational purposes only. This is my own portfolio which is being managed according to my goals and risk tolerance. Your situation is likely different and you should do your own due diligence before investing in stocks or options.

Comments


The Money Loaf is my journey towards FIRE (financial independence, retire early), and should be read as information and education, not financial advice. The Money Loaf is not a financial advisor and you should not make any financial decisions without doing your own due diligence or consulting an advisor if you need to. 

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