Strategy Comparison
Wheel Strategy vs Dividend Growth
This page compares option income cadence versus long-horizon dividend compounding. It is best for investors choosing between active management and lower-turnover equity income, and the core trade-off is that dividend growth relies less on trade timing.
How the return engine differs
The wheel earns through repeated option premium and selective stock ownership. The comparison strategy changes where the return comes from, how often you act, and how sensitive the plan is to timing.
- Map where cash flow shows up first: option premium, dividends, or upside participation.
- Check whether assignment is part of the plan or a failure mode.
- Do not compare gross returns without comparing management workload.
Capital and risk profile
A strong comparison is mostly about what capital gets trapped and how ugly the bad path can become. The wheel stays easier to reason about when you keep the assignment and covered-call phases explicit.
- Define the worst ordinary path before comparing average outcomes.
- Separate undefined risk from merely uncomfortable but bounded risk.
- Use capital at risk, not premium dollars, as the base metric.
When the wheel is the better fit
The wheel usually wins when you want repeated decisions, can accept capped upside during call-selling phases, and prefer a position management loop that stays simple enough to journal honestly.
- Recurring income matters more than catching every rally.
- You are willing to own the stock if the put gets assigned.
- You value disciplined position repair over maximum capital efficiency.
Decision checklist
The cleanest choice is usually the one you can repeat through a stressful tape without improvising. If your checklist keeps changing after each drawdown, you probably picked the wrong structure.
- Can you explain the strategy to yourself in one sentence before entering?
- Do you know what event will make you stop using it?
- Will your journal capture the real denominator behind the return?
Related playbooks
All playbooksWheel Strategy Glossary
Cash-secured put in Wheel Trading
Cash-secured put explained for wheel traders: what it means, why it matters, and the mistake that usually causes bad decisions.
Wheel Strategy Glossary
Covered call in Wheel Trading
Covered call explained for wheel traders: what it means, why it matters, and the mistake that usually causes bad decisions.
Wheel Strategy Glossary
Premium yield in Wheel Trading
Premium yield explained for wheel traders: what it means, why it matters, and the mistake that usually causes bad decisions.
Wheel Strategy Glossary
Adjusted cost basis in Wheel Trading
Adjusted cost basis explained for wheel traders: what it means, why it matters, and the mistake that usually causes bad decisions.