Neutral (range-bound) AdvancedVolatility / Income

Short Strangle

Sell an OTM call and put to collect premium over a wider range than a short straddle — still unlimited risk.

What is a Short Strangle?

A Short Strangle sells an OTM call and an OTM put at different strikes. It collects less premium than a short straddle but offers a wider profit range — you keep the full credit as long as the underlying stays between the two short strikes at expiry. Like the short straddle, risk is unlimited beyond the breakevens, so it is strictly for experienced, well-capitalised traders with disciplined stops.

Payoff Diagram

Profit & Loss at expiry

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

2030019700BE 19520BE 20480+252-1200-492Underlying price at expiry
Max Profit
Total premium received (kept if price finishes between the two short strikes).
Max Loss
Unlimited (upside) and very large (downside).
Breakeven
Upper = Call strike + Total premium; Lower = Put strike − Total premium.
Outlook
Neutral (range-bound)

Construction

  • Sell 1 OTM Call (above spot).
  • Sell 1 OTM Put (below spot), same expiry.
  • Total premium received = maximum profit.

When to Use It

Use when you expect a range-bound market and IV is high. The wider strikes give more room than a short straddle. Manage risk with stops or by buying wings (which converts it into an Iron Condor).

The Greeks

Delta ≈ 0 at entry, Positive Theta, Negative Vega, Negative Gamma.

Risks & Considerations

  • Unlimited loss beyond either breakeven.
  • Volatility spikes inflate both legs against you.
  • Trending markets create accelerating (negative-gamma) losses.
  • High and variable margin requirements.

Worked Example (Nifty)

Illustrative trade — lot size 75

Nifty 20,000. Sell 20,300 CE ₹90 + 19,700 PE ₹90 = ₹180 credit (₹13,500 max profit) if Nifty stays between 19,700 and 20,300. Breakevens 19,520 and 20,480. A move to 21,000 makes the call worth ₹700, loss = (700 − 180) × 75 = ₹39,000 and rising.

Frequently Asked Questions

Short strangle vs Iron Condor?
Add long OTM wings to a short strangle and it becomes an Iron Condor — defined risk and lower margin, at the cost of some premium. Most retail traders should prefer the condor.
How do I pick strikes?
Further-OTM strikes widen the safe range but collect less premium. Many sellers use ~0.15–0.20 delta strikes to balance range and credit.
Is this suitable for beginners?
No. The unlimited risk and margin behaviour make it an advanced strategy. Beginners wanting a neutral income trade should use the defined-risk Iron Condor.
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.