This strategy is just the opposite of Long Straddle. A trader should adopt this strategy when he expects less volatility in the near future. Here, a trader will sell one Call Option & one Put Option of the same strike price, same expiry date and of the same underlying asset. If the stock/index hovers around the same levels then both the options will expire worthless an
This strategy is similar to Short Straddle; the only difference is of the strike prices at which the positions are built. Short Strangle involves selling of one OTM Call Option and selling of one OTM Put Option, of the same expiry date and same underlying asset. Here the probability of making profits is more as there is a spread between the two strike prices, and if ..
Lower Breakeven = Strike Price of Put - Net Premium, Upper breakeven = Strike Price of Call+ Net Premium
Lower Break-even = Strike Price of Put - Net Premium, Upper Break-even = Strike Price of Call+ Net Premium
SHORT STRADDLE Vs SHORT STRANGLE - When & How to use ?
SHORT STRADDLE
SHORT STRANGLE
Market View
Neutral
Neutral
When to use?
This strategy is work well when an investor expect a flat market in the coming days with very less movement in the prices of underlying asset.
This strategy is perfect in a neutral market scenario when the underlying is expected to be less volatile.
Action
Sell Call Option, Sell Put Option
Sell OTM Call, Sell OTM Put
Breakeven Point
Lower Breakeven = Strike Price of Put - Net Premium, Upper breakeven = Strike Price of Call+ Net Premium
Lower Break-even = Strike Price of Put - Net Premium, Upper Break-even = Strike Price of Call+ Net Premium
SHORT STRADDLE Vs SHORT STRANGLE - Risk & Reward
SHORT STRADDLE
SHORT STRANGLE
Maximum Profit Scenario
Max Profit = Net Premium Received - Commissions Paid
Maximum Profit = Net Premium Received
Maximum Loss Scenario
Maximum Loss = Long Call Strike Price - Short Call Strike Price - Net Premium Received
Loss = Price of Underlying - Strike Price of Short Call - Net Premium Received
Risk
Unlimited
Unlimited
Reward
Limited
Limited
SHORT STRADDLE Vs SHORT STRANGLE - Strategy Pros & Cons
SHORT STRADDLE
SHORT STRANGLE
Similar Strategies
Short Strangle
Short Straddle, Long Strangle
Disadvantage
• Unlimited risk. • If the price of the underlying asset moves in either direction then huge losses can occur.
• Unlimited loss is associated with this strategy, not recommended for beginners. • Limited reward amount.
Advantages
• A trader can earn profit even when there is no volatility in the market . • Allows you to benefit from double time decay. • Trader can collect premium from puts and calls option .
• Higher chance of profitability due to selling of OTM options. • Advantage from double time decay and a contraction in volatility. • Traders can book profit when underlying asset stays within a tight trading range.