What Do WORX Fundamentals Tell Options Traders?

SCWorx Corp. (WORX), operates in Healthcare / Medical - Healthcare Information Services, listed on NASDAQ.

The fundamentals on this page cover the most recent annual income statement and trailing-twelve-month (TTM) profitability, leverage, and capital-efficiency ratios. Options traders use fundamentals to size position risk, choose between premium-selling and premium-buying structures, and frame the implied-volatility expectations going into earnings windows. Data refreshes once per trading day from the financial-statements feed; ratios are computed TTM rather than annualized so they reflect the most recent four reported quarters.

Income Statement (Latest Annual)

Revenue
$2.9M
Net Income
-$4.4M
EPS
-9.15
Gross Profit Margin
32.0%

TTM Ratios

P/E
-0.28
P/S
0.10
P/B
0.17
ROE
-64.6%
ROA
-53.3%
Current Ratio
2.53

Key Metrics

ROIC
-10.8%

Reading the Numbers

WORX shows negative trailing earnings (P/E -0.28), negative ROE.

For options strategy selection, the trailing P/E and earnings trajectory frame the implied-volatility expectations going into earnings: a high-multiple growth profile typically commands richer pre-earnings IV (and a sharper post-event IV crush) than a low-multiple profile with stable earnings. Leverage and liquidity ratios influence the tail-risk profile relevant to put-selling and assignment risk; balance-sheet strength reduces the structural drift toward distress that can blow out short-put trades during a regime shift.

How Fundamentals Inform Options Strategy Selection

Options traders read fundamentals as one input to strategy selection rather than as a standalone directional thesis. Companies with positive free cash flow, contained leverage, and durable ROE are candidates for cash-secured put selling and covered-call income strategies, where assignment risk is backstopped by the underlying business. Companies with deteriorating fundamentals or elevated leverage are better paired with defined-risk structures (debit spreads, ratio backspreads) where maximum loss is capped at the cost of the premium paid.

Earnings catalysts deserve specific attention: high-multiple names with rising IV ahead of a print compress hard on a print that confirms the multiple, and they sell off sharply on a miss. That asymmetry is what makes pre-earnings short-vol structures attractive when IV rank is high and the company has a beat-rate track record, and dangerous when expectations are stretched. Pair the fundamental read with IV crush mechanics, the variance risk premium, and WORX's earnings history before sizing into an event-driven trade.

Learn how fundamentals is reported and how to read the data →