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Comparision (SHORT PUT VS LONG STRANGLE)

 

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  SHORT PUT LONG STRANGLE
About Strategy

Short Put Option Strategy

A trader will short put if he is bullish in nature and expects the underlying asset not to fall below a certain level.
Risk: Losses will be potentially unlimited if the stock skyrockets above the strike price of put.

Long Strangle Option Strategy

A Strangle is similar to Straddle. In Strangle, a trader will purchase one OTM Call Option and one OTM Put Option, of the same expiry date and the same underlying asset. This strategy will reduce the entry cost for trader and it is also cheaper than straddle. A trader will make profits, if the market moves sharply in either direction and gives extra-ordinary returns in the ..

SHORT PUT Vs LONG STRANGLE - Details

SHORT PUT LONG STRANGLE
Market View Bullish Neutral
Type (CE/PE) PE (Put Option) CE (Call Option) + PE (Put Option)
Number Of Positions 1 2
Strategy Level Beginners Beginners
Reward Profile Limited Unlimited
Risk Profile Unlimited Limited
Breakeven Point Strike Price - Premium Lower Breakeven Point = Strike Price of Put - Net Premium, Upper Breakeven Point = Strike Price of Call + Net Premium

SHORT PUT Vs LONG STRANGLE - When & How to use ?

SHORT PUT LONG STRANGLE
Market View Bullish Neutral
When to use? This strategy works well when you're Bullish that the price of the underlying will not fall beyond a certain level. This strategy is used in special scenarios where you foresee a lot of volatility in the market due to election results, budget, policy change, annual result announcements etc.
Action Sell Put Option Buy OTM Call Option, Buy OTM Put Option
Breakeven Point Strike Price - Premium Lower Breakeven Point = Strike Price of Put - Net Premium, Upper Breakeven Point = Strike Price of Call + Net Premium

SHORT PUT Vs LONG STRANGLE - Risk & Reward

SHORT PUT LONG STRANGLE
Maximum Profit Scenario Premium received in your account when you sell the Put Option. Profit = Price of Underlying - Strike Price of Long Call - Net Premium Paid
Maximum Loss Scenario Unlimited (When the price of the underlying falls.) Max Loss = Net Premium Paid
Risk Unlimited Limited
Reward Limited Unlimited

SHORT PUT Vs LONG STRANGLE - Strategy Pros & Cons

SHORT PUT LONG STRANGLE
Similar Strategies Bull Put Spread, Short Starddle Long Straddle, Short Strangle
Disadvantage • Unlimited risk. • Huge losses if the price of the underlying stock falls steeply. • Require significant price movement to book profit. • Traders can lose more money if the underlying asset stayed stagnant.
Advantages • Benefit from time decay. • Less capital required than buying the stock outright. • Profit when underlying stock price rise, move sideways or drop by a relatively small account. • Able to book profit, no matter if the underlying asset goes in either direction. • Limited loss to the debit paid. • If the underlying asset continues to move in one direction then you can book Unlimited profit .

SHORT PUT

LONG STRANGLE