Series 9 Cheatsheet — Options Accounts, Trading Activities & Supervision

High-yield FINRA Series 9 reference: options account approvals, suitability/Reg BI mindset for strategies, margin and limits supervision, exercise/assignment operations, trade error handling, and options communications standards.

Series 9 is an options supervision exam. The best answer is usually the one that follows WSPs, applies the correct options approval/limits/control, and creates a clean audit trail.

This cheat sheet is a study aid (not legal advice). Always follow your firm’s WSPs and current FINRA/SEC requirements.

Use this alongside the Syllabus and Practice. Series 9 is “options + supervision”: know the strategy economics, then pick the safest compliant supervisor action.

Exam map (where points come from)

Series 9 at a glance (FINRA)

  • Items: 55 scored + 5 unscored (60 total)
  • Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
  • Passing score: 70

Job functions and weights

FunctionWeightSupervisor reality
F132.7%approve options accounts, ODD/special statement, margin review
F234.5%trade/sales practice supervision, limits, assignments, errors, complaints
F39.1%options communications standards and approvals
F423.6%options product knowledge, strategy economics, and market mechanics

How Series 9 questions are written (exam mindset)

  • Most questions are “branch manager supervision”: account approval, strategy suitability/best-interest thinking, limit/margin controls, or what to do after an exception occurs.
  • Wrong answers often skip a required control: missing ODD/special statement, wrong approval level, unverified authority, or undocumented discretionary activity.
  • When in doubt, pick the answer that restricts risk, escalates, and documents rather than “letting it through.”

“Best answer” checklist (Series 9 style)

  • What is the customer’s approved options level? covered writing vs spreads vs uncovered writing, etc.
  • Is the documentation complete? options agreement, ODD delivery, special statement where required, authority docs.
  • Does the strategy fit the profile? objective, risk tolerance, experience, time horizon.
  • What control is required? hold/decline, restrict, escalate, document, remediate.
  • Will this survive an audit? approvals, timestamps, exception handling, retention.

Options account approval (F1 high yield)

What supervisors are really approving

Options account approval is a risk permissioning decision. You’re approving:

  • the customer’s options approval level (what strategies are permitted)
  • the documentation package (ODD delivery, agreements, special statements)
  • the customer profile as the basis for the level (experience/objectives/risk)
  • the margin profile (if margin is used; including strategy-specific implications)

Fast approval checklist

  • customer identity verified (CIP) and onboarding documentation complete
  • KYC profile supports options activity (experience, objectives, risk tolerance)
  • ODD delivered and evidence retained
  • special statement for uncovered writers delivered where required
  • minimum equity requirements met for the approval level requested
  • discretionary authority (if any) is documented and reviewed/approved by the designated ROP
  • exceptions are documented and approved per WSPs

High-yield trap: approving a higher options level than the customer profile supports, or missing required delivery/acknowledgment evidence.

Options approval levels (firm-defined, exam-level patterns)

Firms can label levels differently, but the exam logic is consistent: higher-risk strategies require higher approvals, more equity, and clearer disclosures.

Strategy bucketExamplesWhy supervision is stricter
Defined-risk / hedgingprotective put, covered call, collarsloss can be explained with clear caps/floors
Premium paid strategieslong calls/putsmax loss limited to premium but can still be unsuitable for conservative profiles
Spreads (defined risk)vertical spreads, butterflies/condorsstill complex; max loss depends on strike width and net debit/credit
Uncovered writingshort naked calls/putspotentially large/unlimited loss; equity + suitability scrutiny is highest

High-yield trap: if the stem says “customer is approved for covered writing only,” any answer involving spreads or uncovered writing is usually wrong.

Discretionary options accounts (frequent trap)

Discretion + options = heightened control:

  • discretionary authority must be written, accepted, and supervised
  • the designated supervisor (often an ROP) must review acceptance and ongoing activity (high level)
  • “rep traded without prior customer approval” is usually wrong unless written discretion exists and is within scope

Strategy economics (Series 9 math you should know)

Option value vocabulary (fast)

  • Intrinsic value: in-the-money amount (Call: S − K, Put: K − S, floored at 0).
  • Time value: Premium − Intrinsic.
  • Moneyness: ITM / ATM / OTM affects exercise probability and assignment risk.

Single-leg basics

PositionMax gainMax lossBreakeven at expiration
Long callunlimitedpremium paidStrike + Premium
Long putStrike − Premium (to zero)premium paidStrike − Premium
Short call (uncovered)premiumunlimitedStrike + Premium
Short put (uncovered)premiumStrike − Premium (to zero)Strike − Premium

Common “supervision” strategies

StrategyWhat it isMax gainMax lossBreakeven at expiration
Covered calllong stock + short call(Call Strike − Stock Cost) + PremiumStock Cost − Premium (to zero)Stock Cost − Premium
Protective putlong stock + long putunlimited (less put premium)(Stock Cost + Put Premium) − Put StrikeStock Cost + Put Premium
Bull call spread (debit)buy call (lower K), sell call (higher K)(High K − Low K) − Net DebitNet DebitLow K + Net Debit
Bear put spread (debit)buy put (higher K), sell put (lower K)(High K − Low K) − Net DebitNet DebitHigh K − Net Debit
Bull put spread (credit)sell put (higher K), buy put (lower K)Net Credit(High K − Low K) − Net CreditHigh K − Net Credit
Bear call spread (credit)sell call (lower K), buy call (higher K)Net Credit(High K − Low K) − Net CreditLow K + Net Credit
Long straddlebuy call + buy put (same K)unlimitedTotal PremiumK ± Total Premium
Long stranglebuy call (higher K) + buy put (lower K)unlimitedTotal PremiumPut K − Premium and Call K + Premium

Notes:

  • “Stock cost” is the price paid (basis) at entry.
  • Spreads assume same expiration.
  • Real-world results depend on early exercise, dividends, and assignment timing; Series 9 questions are usually expiration-based unless the stem signals otherwise.

Why supervisors care

  • Breakeven and max loss determine whether a strategy is consistent with the customer profile.
  • “Unlimited loss” strategies are usually where approvals, equity, and disclosures matter most.

Suitability and best-interest thinking (F1 + F2)

Series 9 is not a pure math exam; it’s a “should the firm allow this?” exam.

Fast suitability screen for options strategies

  • Objective fit: income vs hedging vs speculation (and whether the customer is truly seeking that objective).
  • Risk tolerance: is max loss and worst-case scenario acceptable and understood?
  • Experience: does the customer have options experience consistent with the complexity?
  • Time horizon and liquidity: can they withstand adverse moves without forced liquidation?
  • Concentration: is the options position too large relative to net worth/liquid assets?
  • Costs: commissions and strategy costs can overwhelm expected benefit (high level).

High-yield trap: “customer wants income” doesn’t automatically justify uncovered writing.

Margin and limits supervision (F1 + F2)

Margin supervision themes (exam level)

  • strategy-specific margin implications (uncovered writing vs spreads vs covered positions)
  • initial vs maintenance requirement concepts and what happens when equity falls
  • portfolio margin requires specialized approvals and monitoring
  • pattern day trader concepts can trigger special equity and supervision rules
  • position limits, exercise limits, and large position reporting are monitored and exceptions escalated

Defined-risk spread margin intuition (high yield)

For most defined-risk vertical spreads, supervisors should know the “shape” of risk:

  • Debit spread: max loss is the debit paid (paid-in-full logic).
  • Credit spread: margin is driven by the spread width, offset by the credit received.

Example (concept):

  • sell 50 put, buy 45 put for a 2 credit → width is 5 → max loss is 5 − 2 = 3 per share (× 100 per contract).

Limits and large position monitoring (exam level)

The exam expects you to recognize that firms monitor:

  • position limits and exercise limits
  • large position reporting triggers
  • aggregation across related accounts for monitoring/reporting (high level)

Supervisor move: investigate exceptions, restrict activity, and document corrective action.

Exercise and assignment operations (F2 high yield)

Know the supervisor-relevant concepts:

  • assignment happens to writers; customers can be assigned unexpectedly
  • exercise notices can include contrary exercise advice (process-focused)
  • OCC assignment and firm allocation methods (e.g., FIFO vs random) exist; customers must be notified of the method used
  • corporate actions can adjust option contracts; supervise correct handling and customer impact
  • settlement/delivery and payment mechanics follow from the exercise/assignment outcome

Early exercise and dividend risk (common exam logic)

Series 9 questions often test the idea (high level) that early exercise risk is not random:

  • calls that are deep ITM with little time value remaining can be exercised
  • dividend timing can change the economics of exercising vs holding

Supervisor move: ensure customers receive appropriate risk disclosures and that the firm’s procedures handle assignment/exercise correctly.

Complaints and errors (F2)

Two recurring exam moves:

  • Complaint: log, acknowledge, escalate, investigate, retain.
  • Trade error: correct transparently (cancel/rebill or error account), don’t shift losses to a customer, and follow the obvious error process where applicable.

Prohibited activities and red flags (F2)

When you see these in a stem, think: “stop, escalate, document.”

  • guaranteeing profits or against loss
  • sharing in accounts or assuming customer losses
  • unauthorized or unapproved discretion
  • borrowing from or lending to customers (conflict)
  • “trades with no economic purpose” that look like manipulative activity
  • MNPI or information barrier violations

Options communications (F3)

What Series 9 is testing:

  • communications must be fair and balanced; avoid guarantees, misleading risk statements, or cherry-picked performance
  • options programs/worksheets have specific content and disclosure expectations (high level)
  • retail vs correspondence vs institutional categories matter for review/approval and record retention

High-yield trap: using disclaimers as a substitute for fixing a misleading main message.

Communication category quick map (exam level)

  • Retail communication: broad distribution; principal approval and records matter most.
  • Correspondence: customer-specific; still must meet content standards and be supervised/retained.
  • Institutional communication: institutional-only; still must be fair, accurate, and appropriately disclosed.

Glossary (Series 9 level)

  • Assignment: OCC process allocating exercise to short positions (writers).
  • Breakeven: underlying price where profit/loss is zero at expiration.
  • CIP / AML: onboarding identity verification and anti-money laundering controls (high level).
  • Close: buy/sell transaction used to offset (close) an existing option position.
  • Covered call: short call backed by long underlying.
  • Debit spread / credit spread: spread opened for a net debit (premium paid) or net credit (premium received).
  • Delta / theta / vega: sensitivity measures for price, time decay, and volatility (high level; useful for risk intuition).
  • Exercise: using the contract’s right (call buys shares; put sells shares).
  • Intrinsic / time value: in-the-money value vs premium beyond intrinsic.
  • ODD: Options Disclosure Document; must be delivered and evidenced.
  • OCC: Options Clearing Corporation; clears and assigns standardized listed options.
  • ROP: Registered Options Principal; designated supervisor for options account approvals (high level).
  • Spread width: difference between strike prices in a vertical spread; drives maximum risk in many defined-risk spreads.
  • Uncovered (naked) option: short option without an offsetting position; higher-risk approval level.
  • Position/exercise limits: limits intended to reduce market impact/manipulation risk (high level).