The simple rule
A good growth call gives the company enough time to prove the thesis, while giving you more upside than shares without making the breakeven unrealistic.
Best shorthand: look for a 6–24 month call, with roughly 0.40–0.70 delta, acceptable liquidity, a spread under roughly 35%, and a breakeven inside your realistic bull case.
For growth companies, the best contract is rarely the cheapest one. Very cheap calls are often cheap because the stock has to make an enormous move quickly. The better target is a usable contract: enough time, sensible strike, real liquidity, and a payoff that fits the stock thesis.
Options jargon in plain English
Call optionA contract giving the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy the stock at a set price before expiry.
Strike priceThe price at which the call allows you to buy the stock if exercised. A $10 call has a $10 strike.
PremiumThe price you pay for the option. A call quoted at $1.80 usually costs about $180 because one equity option contract normally controls 100 shares.
Expiry / DTEThe date the option expires. DTE means days to expiry. More DTE gives the thesis more time to work.
BreakevenFor a call, this is usually strike + premium. A $10 call costing $2 breaks even at $12 at expiry.
DeltaRoughly how much the option moves for a $1 stock move. A 0.50 delta call may move about $0.50 for a $1 stock move.
ThetaTime decay. The amount of option value lost each day, all else equal. Theta tends to become more punishing as expiry gets close.
Implied volatility / IVThe market's priced-in expectation of future movement. Higher IV usually means more expensive options.
Bid / ask spreadThe difference between what buyers are bidding and sellers are asking. Wide spreads make entry and exit more expensive.
Open interest / OIThe number of open contracts in that option series. Very low OI can mean poor liquidity.
Start with the stock thesis, not the option chain
Before looking at calls, decide why the stock should be materially higher and how long that may take. The option contract should fit the thesis; the thesis should not be bent to fit a cheap-looking contract.
| Question | Why it matters |
| Why should the stock rise? | Contracts, revenue acceleration, product adoption, sector momentum, institutional demand, earnings, defence/AI/robotics catalyst, etc. |
| How long might the move take? | This determines whether you need 90, 180, 365 or 730 DTE. |
| What is the realistic base target? | The breakeven should ideally be below this, or at least close to it. |
| What is the bull target? | The best growth calls should still have meaningful upside if the stock reaches this level. |
| Where is the thesis invalidated? | If the stock breaks major support or the company story deteriorates, the option can decay quickly. |
Choose enough time
Growth companies often move in uneven waves. A story can be right but early. Short-dated calls punish early entries because time decay accelerates as expiry approaches.
| Thesis type | Useful expiry zone | Comment |
| Immediate catalyst | 30–90 DTE | Only for news, earnings, contract announcements or near-term momentum. |
| Growth swing | 90–180 DTE | Useful when the chart is setting up and the company has a plausible multi-month move. |
| Company thesis | 180–730 DTE | Best for companies like BWAY or RCAT when the story may need multiple quarters. |
| LEAPS-style position | 365–730+ DTE | Useful when you are trying to capture a longer re-rating, not a quick trade. |
Rule: if the thesis is a company transformation, avoid making it a weekly-options bet.
Use delta correctly
Delta is one of the most useful filters for growth calls. It tells you how responsive the option is to the stock. Very low-delta calls can produce spectacular returns if the stock explodes, but they also expire worthless more often.
| Delta | Plain English | Use |
| 0.80–0.90 | Stock substitute | High participation, expensive, less leverage. |
| 0.60–0.75 | Core growth call | Strong participation and still meaningful leverage. |
| 0.40–0.60 | Convex growth call | Good upside if the thesis works. |
| 0.25–0.40 | Speculative call | Needs a stronger move; position size should reflect that. |
| <0.20 | Lottery ticket | Usually avoid unless deliberately taking a tiny moonshot. |
For BWAY/RCAT-style growth calls, the most useful area is often 0.40–0.70 delta.
Breakeven must be realistic
A call can have enormous theoretical upside and still be a bad contract if the breakeven is too high. For a call, breakeven at expiry is:
Breakeven = strike price + premium paid
| Breakeven move required | Interpretation |
| 0–20% | Sensible |
| 20–40% | Acceptable for growth |
| 40–70% | Aggressive |
| 70–100% | Speculative |
| 100%+ | Moonshot only |
The breakeven should ideally sit inside the realistic bull case. If breakeven is only reached in the extreme case, the contract should be labelled speculative rather than core.
Do not overpay for IV
Implied volatility is the market's priced-in expectation of future movement. High IV increases option premiums. This can create the unpleasant situation where you are right about the stock direction but still make little money because you overpaid for the option.
| IV level | Interpretation |
| <50% | Reasonable or potentially attractive. |
| 50–80% | Common for volatile growth names. |
| 80–120% | Expensive, but sometimes normal for small growth stocks. |
| 120%+ | Be careful; the option may already price in a large move. |
| 150%+ | Usually event-driven, overexcited or very speculative. |
Rule: high IV requires a better entry. Prefer buying after pullbacks, consolidations or calmer option premium rather than after a vertical stock move.
Liquidity and spreads
Small-cap options can look attractive on paper but be difficult to trade. A wide bid/ask spread means you may lose money immediately simply by entering at a poor price.
| Spread as % of mid | Verdict |
| <10% | Good |
| 10–20% | Acceptable |
| 20–35% | Tolerable, but use limit orders |
| 35–50% | Poor; only if deliberate |
| 50%+ | Usually avoid |
For BWAY/RCAT-style contracts, some spread is normal. The practical rule is to compare the analyser's assumed cost with your broker's live bid/ask. If the analyser used $1.80 but the live ask is $2.50, the score is stale.
Contract types to look for
| Type | Typical delta | Purpose |
| Stock substitute | 0.75–0.90 | Safer, more expensive, lower leverage. Useful if you want exposure but less capital tied up than shares. |
| Core growth call | 0.55–0.75 | The main candidate for a growth thesis. Good participation with meaningful leverage. |
| Convex growth call | 0.35–0.55 | More upside-focused. Needs the stock to move, but can offer a better reward profile. |
| Moonshot | 0.20–0.35 | Small position only. This should not be the core contract. |
The analyser should not simply say “best contract.” It should identify the best core call, best convex call, best LEAPS-style call, and any contracts to avoid.
Practical workflow
1
Define the thesis window. Is this a catalyst trade, a 3–6 month swing, or a 12–24 month company story?
2
Filter the chain. Calls only, monthly expiries, DTE that matches the thesis, delta around 0.30–0.85, minimum OI, and acceptable spread.
3
Compare breakeven to targets. If breakeven is above the extreme target, the contract is usually not a practical core choice.
4
Classify the contract. Stock substitute, core growth call, convex call or moonshot.
5
Check live execution. Compare the analyser cost with your broker's bid/ask. Use limit orders near mid rather than blindly paying the ask.
Final checklist for BWAY / RCAT-style growth calls
Sweet spot: 6–24 months out, 0.40–0.70 delta, acceptable spread, realistic breakeven, and enough liquidity to exit.
DTEPrefer 180–730 DTE for company-level growth ideas.
DeltaCore zone: 0.45–0.70. Below 0.25 is usually speculative.
BreakevenShould sit inside the realistic bull case, not above the extreme target.
SpreadPrefer under 20%; tolerate up to about 35% only with limit orders.
OI / volumeMinimum OI around 10–50; better if OI is 100+.
IVHigh IV requires a better entry. Do not chase after a vertical move.
Red flags: very short DTE, delta below 0.20, no bid, OI near zero, spread above 50%, breakeven above your extreme target, or IV above 120–150% without a very strong reason.
Sources and further reading
- FINRA — Options and the Greeks: definitions of options, calls, puts, delta, theta, vega and other risk measures.
- Cboe Options Institute: options education, including options basics, calls, puts and strategy education.
- Cboe Options Institute Glossary: definitions of terms such as vega, volatility, volume and unit of trading.