“I don’t design clothes. I design dreams,” Ralph Lauren famously said.
In 2025, shares of the retailer were a dream for investors, rising more than 50%.
2026 has been more reality than a dream, with a tiny 4% gain. And with earnings now in the rearview mirror and no meaningful catalysts on the near-term horizon, the stock looks poised to digest recent moves in a tighter range, making a short strangle an attractive way to collect premium here.
With RL trading in the mid-$360s, selling the June 18th 330 put/390 call strangle for approximately $6.00 in premium defines a clear range: roughly $324–$396 at expiration, accounting for the premium collected. That’s a wide band on a stock that, post-earnings, has little reason to make a dramatic move in the next couple of weeks.
When investors sell strangles, they are selling an out of the money put and an out of the money call. The goal is to have the underlying stock stay between the strikes of the sold put and call, allowing the investor to capture that premium. If the trade is done against stock, the risk is your stock might be called away at that call’s strike price. Should it fall below that strike of the put that you sold, you could be put that stock.
With owning the underlying stock, this structure carries unlimited risk.
Ralph Lauren continues to execute well on its elevation strategy, moving upmarket, reducing wholesale dependence, and growing its direct-to-consumer business. The brand has demonstrated pricing power even in a cautious consumer environment, and international exposure (particularly in Europe and Asia) provides a meaningful growth runway. A resilient luxury-adjacent consumer keeps the floor relatively firm.
Ralph Lauren, 5 years
Nevertheless, a massive upside move is unlikely because macro headwinds remain real. Tariff uncertainty and a softer U.S. consumer could pressure discretionary spending, and RL’s wholesale channel remains vulnerable to weakness in department stores. Good as it is, the upside is not unlimited near term.
Critically, RL reported on May 21st. The event risk (aka “event variance”) that drives outsized moves, such as guidance surprises, margin misses, and inventory concerns is not only been priced in, but few meaningful updates are likely to be reported prior to August 7th, the next expected earnings date. The stock has had time to settle, and options implied volatility, while perhaps still modestly elevated post-earnings.
The 330 strike sits well below near-term support and would require a meaningful breakdown; net of the premium collected, it is safe unless it falls below the November 2025 lows. Meanwhile, the 390 strike would demand a breakout to new all-time highs with no fundamental driver to justify it. Either case is improbable.
At $6.00 in premium, the trade offers a defined, asymmetric edge: theta working for you daily, with strikes that respect realistic support and resistance. Options can be used to profit whether the stock rises, falls, or goes nowhere. With a buffer of 10% higher or lower in less than three weeks, that’s what this trade aims to do.
