Collar Exit Journal
Last verified: 2026-07-13 PDT
A collar exit journal is a written way to slow down a real-life money decision before cash flow, market movement, and emotion get blended together. The point is not to create a universal rule. The point is to make your own rule visible enough to review later.
This page is educational only. It is not personal tax guidance, personal money guidance, or a recommendation to open, close, increase, reduce, or hold any position.
The simple idea
The simple idea is to separate verified records from reactions. For this workflow, the key inputs are underlying shares, long put strike, short call strike, expiration, premiums paid or received, net hedge cost, bid-ask spreads, dividend or event calendar, assignment notes, and the original hedge purpose. If those inputs live in different statements, broker screens, emails, calendars, apps, or memory, the decision becomes hard to audit. If they are written down, you can review the process instead of only judging the result.
A useful review does five jobs:
- ▸Names the exact trigger for the review.
- ▸Captures the source record behind every important number.
- ▸Separates money or risk that already has a job from money or risk still available for user-directed decisions.
- ▸Writes the rule before the outcome becomes emotional.
- ▸Sets a follow-up date so the decision can be checked later.
The core checklist
Use this checklist before changing the plan:
- ▸Write the trigger in one sentence: collar exit, adjustment, expiration, or assignment-risk review.
- ▸List the source records: statement, bill, paystub, broker ticket, contract, quote, account screen, calendar date, or journal note.
- ▸Mark which numbers are verified and which numbers are estimates.
- ▸Separate fixed obligations from flexible capital or flexible risk.
- ▸Define the user-directed action that happens now.
- ▸Define the condition that would pause, reduce, restart, exit, or review the rule.
- ▸Save the note before the outcome turns the decision into a story.
Example
Assume 100 shares are hedged with a 90 put and a 110 call for the same expiration. The put cost 3.20, the call collected 2.10, so the net debit is 1.10, or 110 dollars per contract set. If the stock moves to 109 with two weeks left, the exit journal should show remaining put value, short-call pressure, liquidity, and whether the original purpose was downside protection, defined upside give-up, or temporary event protection.
The important part is not copying the numbers. The important part is preserving the reasoning. A future review should show what was known, what was verified, what was assumed, and which items still needed a source check.
A practical scoring model
Give the decision a ten-point process score:
| Review item | Question | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Source clarity | Is there a record behind the number? | 0-2 |
| Timing clarity | Is the deadline, expiration, bill date, life-event date, or review date visible? | 0-2 |
| Constraint clarity | Are cash floors, obligations, assignment exposure, position limits, or risk caps visible? | 0-2 |
| Rule clarity | Was the rule written before the outcome became emotional? | 0-2 |
| Follow-up clarity | Is the next review action obvious? | 0-2 |
A low score does not prove the decision was bad. It means the record is thin. Fix the record before rewriting the whole plan.
Common mistakes
The first mistake is treating estimates like verified facts. If a number depends on tax treatment, broker handling, employer records, cost basis, option behavior, account rules, loan terms, insurance costs, household bills, or legal documents, label the uncertainty instead of turning it into a universal rule.
The second mistake is reviewing only the result. Clean process can still meet rough timing, a surprise bill, a volatility shift, or a structure that behaves differently than expected. Weak process can also get lucky.
The third mistake is changing the plan while excited, annoyed, embarrassed, tired, or trying to make up for a prior decision. Review gates exist because emotional windows make weak process feel urgent.
How Bucko fits
Bucko fits this workflow as an educational research, journaling, guardrail, scenario-analysis, and review workspace. The user defines the rule. Bucko can help organize the note, preserve the source trail, tag the review reason, and make follow-up dates visible.
That framing matters. Bucko should be used to make user-directed decisions more reviewable, not as a promise engine, managed account substitute, or signal service.
Internal links to build the system
Practical takeaway
A clean plan is not a plan that never changes. A clean plan is one that explains why it changed. Write the source, the constraint, the rule, the unknowns, and the next review date before the decision turns into a memory test.