MRVL, CCL, MU: Put selling bankroll targets income

options seller – A seller dashboard filled with far-dated options reflects a clear push for premium income—while traders hedge against downside, look for assignment at set prices, and cap upside through calls. Key picks include large premium sales on Marvell (MRVL), a Carnival
The market’s mood can change fast, but the strategy on this dashboard doesn’t. The focus is straightforward: sell options to harvest premium now, then either collect the payoff if the trade expires out of the money—or be ready to own shares (or give them up) at pre-set prices.
From the top of the list, one trade stands out for its sheer scale and time horizon. A block trade in Marvell Technology (MRVL.US) saw the seller move out a $300 Call expiring Jan 21. 2028 at the bid. collecting $15.01M in premium. The conviction is not subtle: the seller is positioned for MRVL’s bull run to be “exhausted. ” with the stock expected not to clear $420.10 by January 2028. That number is built from the strike of $300 plus the $120.10 premium received. With 577 days to expiration and a size in the $15M+ range. the trade reads less like a quick hedge and more like a multi-quarter fade—betting the late-cycle momentum that carried MRVL into the 300s won’t last.
Other income plays lean on shorter windows and tight math. Bloom Energy (BE.US) is paired with a 20260724 sell of a 227.50 put. The potential margin required is $22,750 ($227.5 × 100), premium received is $595.00, and the ROI for 31 days is calculated at 2.69% ($595.00 ÷ ($22,750 − 595.00)). Annualized return comes out to 31.28%. The breakeven is $221.550 ($227.5 − $5.950), with a stated probability of profit at 87.14%. Beneath the options numbers is a fundamental nudge: Barclays raises Bloom Energy’s target price to $276 from $254.
The same dashboard shows a different kind of corporate story driving the trade selection—this time on Strategy (MSTR.US). A 20260717 sell at 85.00 put lists a potential margin required of $8. 500 ($85 × 100). premium received of $168.50. and an annualized return of 30.33% (ROI for 24 days: 2.02%). Breakeven is $83.315 ($85 − $1.685), with a probability of profit of 82.62%. The stock’s recent action is included directly in the setup: Strategy sold 2.7 million common shares. raising $335.5 million; it purchased 520 bitcoin and added $300 million to cash reserves. reaching $1.4 billion.
Nebius (NBIS.US) sits next, tied to a completion headline. The dashboard lists a 20260717 sell of a 200.00 put. with potential margin required of $20. 000 ($200 × 100). premium received of $640.00. and ROI for 24 days of 3.31% ($640.00 ÷ ($20. 000 − 640.00)). Annualized return is 49.58%, breakeven $193.600 ($200 − $6.400), and probability of profit 82.42%. The underlying event is specific: Nebius completes its Eigen AI acquisition to strengthen its AI cloud platform and will join the Nasdaq-100 index in June 2026.
Carnival (CCL.US) is the kind of trade that reads like a calendar decision. A sell of a 25.00 put expiring 20260731 shows potential margin required of $2,500 ($25 × 100) and premium received of $141.50. The ROI for 38 days is 6.00%, and annualized return is 57.12%. Breakeven lands at $23.585 ($25 − $1.415), with a probability of profit of 82.27%. The included catalyst: Carnival will report second-quarter earnings before Tuesday’s opening bell with analysts expecting 34 cents per share.
Space dynamics also show up, but the trade framing is different. For AST SpaceMobile (ASTS.US). the list shows an options spread/structure: “Sell 105.00 C and Buy 100 ASTSPremium received: $146.50.” The ROI for 24 days is 2.04%. with annualized return of 30.63%. Breakeven is $103.535 ($105 − $1.465), and probability of profit is 92.57%. The accompanying market pressure is blunt: AST SpaceMobile affiliate plans to sell 2.5 million shares worth approximately $183 million while the stock falls over 8% amid SpaceX IPO impact.
Micron Technology (MU.US) brings a Wall Street call price target into the mix. The dashboard lists “Sell 1500.00C and Buy 100 MUPremium received: $2435.00” with ROI for 9 days of 2.05% and annualized return of 80.19%. The breakeven is $1475.650 ($1,500 − $24.350), with probability of profit at 86.35%. The fundamental note tied to it: Bank of America raises Micron Technology price target to $1. 500 from $950 and maintains a buy rating.
Nokia (NOK.US) is another 20260717 call structure on the same dashboard. The list shows “Sell 18.00C and Buy 100 NOK. ” with ROI for 24 days of 2.52% ($35.50 ÷ ($1. 800 − 35.50)). annualized return of 37.83%. breakeven of $17.645 ($18 − $0.355). and probability of profit of 86.08%. The trade is paired with an expansion detail: Nokia expands partnership with Google Cloud to integrate Gemini AI models into Nokia’s network software suite.
And. circling back to Marvell—but with a different strike and timing—there’s another entry: a “Sell $Marvell Technology (MRVL.US)$ 20260717 400.00C and Buy 100 MRVL.” Premium received is $860.00. The ROI for 24 days is 2.87% ($860.00 ÷ ($40,000 − 860.00)), annualized return is 43.10%. Breakeven is $391.400 ($400 − $8.600), and probability of profit is 85.91%. Bank of America Securities raises Marvell Technology price target from $240 to $365 and maintains buy rating.
Taken together. the dashboard isn’t just listing “picks.” It’s spelling out a consistent way of thinking: collect premium quickly in many trades. keep a close eye on defined price levels. and lean on probabilities. The far-dated $300 call in MRVL.US and the shorter-dated puts and calls across BE.US. MSTR.US. NBIS.US. CCL.US. ASTS.US. MU.US. NOK.US. and MRVL.US (the 400 call) all keep returning to one theme—income depends on whether the stock stays out of the trade’s boundaries by expiration.
There’s also a blunt reality under the whole page. If options expire worthless, the seller keeps the premium. But if the trade moves against the seller—whether that means assignment on a put or capped upside on a call—the plan turns into execution at predetermined levels.
That’s the logic described at the bottom of the dashboard: you sell a put on a stock you’re willing to own. collect premium upfront. and your maximum profit is the premium if the option expires out of the money. If the stock falls below the strike at expiration. you may be assigned and must buy 100 shares per contract at the strike price. with the effective cost calculated as strike minus premium. The dashboard also explains the “cash-secured” framing. describes income generation through regular premium. and lays out the covered-call approach—sell a call against shares you already own. collect premium. and accept that upside is capped above the strike.
It’s a disciplined setup, but the page makes clear it isn’t gentle. Options trading involves significant risk and is not appropriate for all customers. It also warns that opening new options positions close to or on their expiration date can carry substantial risk of losses due to potential volatility and limited time to expiration. The page adds that options transactions can be complex and may involve the potential of losing the entire investment in a relatively short period. with certain complex strategies carrying additional risk that losses may exceed the original investment amount.
Before engaging, it urges investors to read the Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options. Supporting documentation for any claims will be furnished upon request.
For traders watching today’s market. the appeal here is simple: premium now. boundaries set. and a range of catalysts—from earnings dates to analyst price targets and corporate moves—built directly into the choices. The tension is equally clear: it only works if prices behave the way the math assumes between now and expiration.
options income daily options seller dashboard Marvell MRVL Carnival CCL Micron MU Bloom BE Strategy MSTR Nebius NBIS AST SpaceMobile ASTS Nokia NOK cash-secured puts covered calls
So they’re just selling calls? Sounds like free money but it never is.
Wait I thought if you sell options you’re guaranteed the premium? Like they said $15 million so who cares if the stock goes up, right? I’m probably missing something but wow.
The whole “not clear $420.10 by Jan 2028” thing is confusing. Isn’t that like the stock price they’re predicting? They literally said $300 strike + $120.10 premium, so if MRVL hits $420 it’s over?? Feels backwards like whoever wrote the dashboard is banking on MRVL not doing well, but it also says bull run. make it make sense.
Options people always talk like it’s a video game. $15.01M premium for Marvell sounds crazy, but I don’t even know if that’s per contract or total or what. And then Carnival too like why are we lumping CCL/MU in with MRVL? Also “assignment” sounds like they’re gonna get stuck holding bags if it runs.