AOS Long Call Strategy
AOS (A. O. Smith Corporation), in the Industrials sector, (Industrial - Machinery industry), listed on NYSE.
A. O. Smith Corporation manufactures and markets residential and commercial gas, heat pump and electric water heaters, boilers, tanks, and water treatment products in North America, China, Europe, and India. It operates through two segments, North America and Rest of World. The company offers water heaters for residences, restaurants, hotels and motels, office buildings, laundries, car washes, and small businesses; commercial boilers for hospitals, schools, hotels, and other large commercial buildings, as well as residential boilers for homes, apartments, and condominiums; and water treatment products comprising point-of-entry water softeners, well water solutions, and whole-home water filtration products, on-the-go filtration bottles, point-of-use carbon, and reverse osmosis products for residences, restaurants, hotels, and offices. It also provides food and beverage filtration products; expansion tanks, commercial solar water heating systems, swimming pool and spa heaters, and related products and parts; and heat pumps, electric wall-hung, gas tankless, combi-boiler, heat pump and solar water heaters.
AOS (A. O. Smith Corporation) trades in the Industrials sector, specifically Industrial - Machinery, with a market capitalization of approximately $7.96B, a trailing P/E of 15.03, a beta of 1.22 versus the broader market, a 52-week range of 56.77-81.87, average daily share volume of 1.5M, a public-listing history dating back to 1983, approximately 13K full-time employees. These structural characteristics shape how AOS stock options price implied volatility around earnings windows, capital events, and macro-driven sector rotations.
A beta of 1.22 places AOS roughly in line with broader market moves, so the strategy payoff and realized volatility track the index-equivalent baseline. AOS pays a dividend, which adjusts put-call parity and shifts the ex-dividend pricing across the listed chain.
What is a long call on AOS?
A long call buys upside exposure with a fixed maximum loss equal to the premium paid; profit accrues if the underlying closes above the strike plus premium at expiration.
Current AOS snapshot
As of May 15, 2026, spot at $56.12, ATM IV 26.90%, IV rank 2.85%, expected move 7.71%. The long call on AOS below is built from the same end-of-day chain, with strikes snapped to listed contracts and premiums pulled from the bid/ask midpoint at a 34-day expiry.
Why this long call structure on AOS specifically: AOS IV at 26.90% is on the cheap side of its 1-year range, which favors premium-buying structures like a AOS long call, with a market-implied 1-standard-deviation move of approximately 7.71% (roughly $4.33 on the underlying). The 34-day window matched to the front-month expiry keeps theta exposure bounded while still capturing the post-snapshot move; longer-dated AOS expiries trade a higher absolute premium for lower per-day decay. Position sizing on AOS should anchor to the underlying notional of $56.12 per share and to the trader's directional view on AOS stock.
AOS long call setup
The AOS long call below is built from the end-of-day chain, with each option leg priced at the bid/ask midpoint of its listed strike. With AOS near $56.12, the first option leg uses a $56.12 strike; additional legs (when the strategy has them) anchor to spot-relative offsets. Premiums come from the bid/ask midpoint on the listed AOS chain at a 34-day expiry; the cross-strike IV skew is reflected directly in the per-leg values rather than approximated. Quantity sizing assumes one contract per option leg (or 100 AOS shares for the stock leg in covered calls and collars).
| Action | Type | Strike / Basis | Premium (est) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buy 1 | Call | $56.12 | N/A |
AOS long call risk and reward
- Net Premium / Debit
- N/A
- Max Profit (per contract)
- Unbounded
- Max Loss (per contract)
- Unbounded
- Breakeven(s)
- None on modeled curve
- Risk / Reward Ratio
- N/A
Max profit is unbounded; max loss equals the premium paid times 100. Breakeven is strike plus premium.
AOS long call payoff curve
Modeled P&L at expiration across a range of underlying prices for the long call on AOS. Each row is one sampled price point from the computed payoff curve; the full curve uses 200 price points internally before being summarized into 10 rows here.
When traders use long call on AOS
Long calls on AOS express a bullish thesis with defined risk; traders use them ahead of AOS catalysts (earnings, product launches, macro events) when the expected upside justifies the premium and theta decay.
AOS thesis for this long call
The market-implied 1-standard-deviation range for AOS extends from approximately $51.79 on the downside to $60.45 on the upside. A AOS long call expresses a directional view that the underlying closes above the strike plus premium at expiration, ideally with implied volatility holding or expanding to preserve extrinsic value through the hold period. Current AOS IV rank near 2.85% sits in the lower third of its 1-year distribution, where IV often re-expands toward the mean; this favors premium-buying structures and disadvantages premium-selling structures on AOS at 26.90%. As a Industrials name, AOS options can move on sector-level news flow (peer earnings, regulatory updates, industry-specific macro data) in addition to AOS-specific events.
AOS long call positions are structurally bullish; the modeled P&L assumes European-style exercise at expiration and ignores early assignment, transaction costs, dividends paid before expiry on the stock leg (when present), and the bid-ask spread on the listed chain. AOS positions also carry Industrials sector concentration risk; news flow inside the sector (peer earnings, regulatory shifts, supply-chain headlines) can move AOS alongside the broader basket even when AOS-specific fundamentals are unchanged. Long-premium structures like a long call on AOS are particularly exposed to IV-crush risk through scheduled events (earnings, FDA decisions, central-bank meetings) where IV typically contracts post-event regardless of the directional outcome. Always rebuild the position from current AOS chain quotes before placing a trade.
Frequently asked questions
- What is a long call on AOS?
- A long call on AOS is the long call strategy applied to AOS (stock). The strategy is structurally bullish: A long call buys upside exposure with a fixed maximum loss equal to the premium paid; profit accrues if the underlying closes above the strike plus premium at expiration. With AOS stock trading near $56.12, the strikes shown on this page are snapped to the nearest listed AOS chain strike and the premiums come straight from the end-of-day bid/ask midpoint.
- How are AOS long call max profit and max loss calculated?
- Max profit is unbounded; max loss equals the premium paid times 100. Breakeven is strike plus premium. For the AOS long call priced from the end-of-day chain at a 30-day expiry (ATM IV 26.90%), the computed maximum profit is unbounded per contract and the computed maximum loss is unbounded per contract. Live intraday quotes will differ as the chain moves through the trading session.
- What is the breakeven for a AOS long call?
- The breakeven for the AOS long call priced on this page is no defined breakeven on the modeled curve at expiration, derived from end-of-day chain premiums. Breakeven is the underlying price at which the strategy's P&L crosses zero ignoring transaction costs and assignment risk. The current AOS market-implied 1-standard-deviation expected move is approximately 7.71%; if the move sits well outside the breakeven distance, the structure's risk-reward becomes correspondingly tighter.
- When should you consider a long call on AOS?
- Long calls on AOS express a bullish thesis with defined risk; traders use them ahead of AOS catalysts (earnings, product launches, macro events) when the expected upside justifies the premium and theta decay.
- How does current AOS implied volatility affect this long call?
- AOS ATM IV is at 26.90% with IV rank near 2.85%, which is on the low end of its 1-year range. Premium-buying structures (long call, long put, debit spreads) are relatively cheap in this regime; premium-selling structures collect less credit per unit risk.