Neutral-to-Bearish IntermediateCredit Spread

Bear Call Spread

Sell a call and buy a higher-strike call to collect premium with a bearish bias and defined risk.

What is a Bear Call Spread?

A Bear Call Spread (credit call spread) sells a lower-strike call and buys a higher-strike call for protection. You collect a net credit, kept in full if the underlying stays below the short strike at expiry. The long call caps the loss. It profits from a flat-to-falling market and from time decay — the bearish counterpart to the bull put spread.

Payoff Diagram

Profit & Loss at expiry

Per share (multiply by lot size 75). Gold dots mark breakeven points; green = profit, red = loss.

2000020400BE 20110+158-900-338Underlying price at expiry
Max Profit
Net credit received.
Max Loss
(Difference between strikes − Net credit).
Breakeven
Lower strike + Net credit
Outlook
Neutral-to-Bearish

Construction

  • Sell 1 OTM Call (lower strike) — collect premium.
  • Buy 1 further-OTM Call (higher strike) — protection.
  • Net credit received = maximum profit.

When to Use It

Use when you are neutral-to-bearish and expect the underlying to stay below a resistance. Best in high-IV regimes where premium is rich and Theta plus IV mean-reversion favour the seller.

The Greeks

Negative Delta, Positive Theta, Negative Vega.

Risks & Considerations

  • Loss can be a multiple of the credit if price rallies past both strikes.
  • Gap-up openings can jump straight to maximum loss.
  • Assignment risk on the short call if it goes ITM (stock options).

Worked Example (Nifty)

Illustrative trade — lot size 75

Nifty 20,000. Sell 20,000 CE ₹200, buy 20,400 CE ₹90. Net credit ₹110 (₹8,250 = max profit) if Nifty stays ≤ 20,000. Max loss = (400 − 110) × 75 = ₹21,750 above 20,400. Breakeven = 20,110.

Frequently Asked Questions

When do I prefer this over a bear put spread?
Use a bear call spread when IV is high and you want to be a net premium seller; use a bear put spread (debit) when IV is low and you want to buy a directional move.
What is the biggest risk?
A sharp rally. Because it is a credit spread, the maximum loss is larger than the credit collected, so position sizing matters.
Can I combine it with a bull put spread?
Yes — selling both around the current price creates an Iron Condor, a neutral, range-bound income strategy.
Educational content only — not investment advice. The example above uses illustrative numbers and does not reflect live market prices. Options trading involves substantial risk. See our Risk Disclosure and SEBI Disclaimer.