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Ratio Spread

Buy fewer options and sell more at a different strike to create a free or credit trade with asymmetric risk.

What Is a Ratio Spread?

A Ratio Spread is an options strategy where you buy a certain number of options at one strike and sell a larger number of options at a different strike, both with the same expiration. The most common ratio is 1:2 -- buy 1 option and sell 2 options at a further-out strike.

The extra option sold (the "naked" leg) generates additional premium, which can reduce the cost of the trade to zero or even create a net credit. However, this naked leg also introduces unlimited risk on one side. The strategy is therefore moderately directional with a defined sweet spot.

Ratio spreads are popular among experienced NSE traders who have a moderately bullish or bearish view and want to enter a trade cheaply. The trade profits handsomely if the underlying moves to the short strike by expiry, but can cause large losses if the move overshoots significantly.

There are two main types: the ratio spread (sell more than you buy) and the ratio backspread (buy more than you sell). Each has a very different risk-reward profile, and understanding the difference is critical before deploying either on live markets.

Call Ratio Spread

Call Ratio Spread = Buy 1 Lower Strike CE + Sell 2 Higher Strike CE
Max Profit = (Higher Strike - Lower Strike) - Net Debit (at the higher strike)
Unlimited Risk Above Upper Breakeven

Buy 1 = ITM or ATM call (e.g., Nifty 24,400 CE)

Sell 2 = OTM calls (e.g., Nifty 24,600 CE x 2)

Net Cost = Premium of 1 bought - Premium of 2 sold (can be debit, zero, or credit)

Upper Breakeven = Higher Strike + Max Profit (per unit)

Risk = Unlimited above upper breakeven (one naked short call)

Payoff Diagram

1:2 Call Ratio Spread Payoff (Buy 24400 CE, Sell 2x 24600 CE) 0 24,400 24,600 24,800 Max Profit Unlimited Loss Limited Loss / Credit

Maximum profit at the short strike (24,600). Unlimited risk above the upper breakeven. Limited loss below the lower strike.

Put Ratio Spread

Construction

A put ratio spread is the mirror image: buy 1 higher strike put and sell 2 lower strike puts. For example, buy 1 lot of Nifty 24,600 PE and sell 2 lots of Nifty 24,400 PE. This is used when you have a moderately bearish view and expect Nifty to drop to the 24,400 level but not much further.

The unlimited risk is on the downside. If Nifty crashes below your lower breakeven, the naked short put causes losses that accelerate with every point of decline. This makes put ratio spreads particularly dangerous during black swan events or market crashes.

Nifty Example

1:2 Call Ratio Spread on Nifty

Nifty is at 24,450. You are moderately bullish and expect Nifty to reach 24,600 by Thursday expiry but not much higher.

Buy 1 lot Nifty 24,400 CE at ₹110 (slightly ITM)

Sell 2 lots Nifty 24,600 CE at ₹30 each = ₹60 received

Net Debit: 110 - 60 = ₹50 per unit = ₹50 x 25 = ₹1,250

Max Profit: (24,600 - 24,400) - 50 = ₹150 per unit = ₹150 x 25 = ₹3,750 (if Nifty closes at exactly 24,600)

Lower Breakeven: 24,400 + 50 = 24,450

Upper Breakeven: 24,600 + 150 = 24,750

Below 24,400: Max loss = ₹1,250 (the net debit)

Above 24,750: Unlimited loss! Every point above 24,750 costs ₹25 per point (1 naked short call).

If Nifty rallies to 25,000 (250 points above upper breakeven): loss = (250 x 25) - 3,750 = ₹2,500. At 25,500 (750 above): loss = (750 x 25) - 3,750 = ₹15,000. The risk accelerates rapidly.

Ratio Backspread

Call Ratio Backspread (1:2 Reverse)

  • Sell 1 lower strike CE + Buy 2 higher strike CE
  • Opposite of the ratio spread: buy more than you sell
  • Limited risk if underlying drops, unlimited profit if it rallies
  • Usually entered for a small debit or at zero cost
  • Best before expected large upward moves (earnings, events)
  • Example: Sell 1 Nifty 24,400 CE, Buy 2 Nifty 24,600 CE

Put Ratio Backspread (1:2 Reverse)

  • Sell 1 higher strike PE + Buy 2 lower strike PE
  • Limited risk if underlying rallies, large profit if it crashes
  • Popular as a crash protection strategy
  • Often entered for zero cost or small credit
  • Best before expected large downward moves or as tail risk hedge
  • Example: Sell 1 Nifty 24,600 PE, Buy 2 Nifty 24,400 PE

Free & Credit Trades

Zero-Cost Ratio Spread

When the premium from the 2 sold options exactly equals the premium of the 1 bought option, you enter for zero cost. Any profit at the sweet spot is pure gain. Popular on Nifty when IV is elevated.

Credit Ratio Spread

When the 2 sold options generate more premium than the 1 bought option, you receive a net credit. Even if the underlying does not move, you keep the credit. But the unlimited risk side is even more dangerous.

The "Free" Illusion

Just because a trade is free to enter does not mean it is risk-free. The unlimited loss potential means the risk-adjusted return may still be unfavorable. Always calculate your upper or lower breakeven carefully.

Margin Requirements

Despite low or zero cost to enter, SEBI margin rules require full margin for the naked leg. A 1:2 Nifty ratio spread may require ₹1-1.5 lakh in margin for the uncovered short option.

Managing the Naked Leg

Stop-Loss on the Underlying

Set a price-based stop-loss. If Nifty crosses your upper breakeven (e.g., 24,750 in our example), immediately close the position or buy back the extra short call. Do not wait and hope. A 500-point gap-up on Monday can cause catastrophic losses.

Convert to Butterfly

If the underlying approaches your short strike, buy 1 more call at a higher strike to convert the 1:2 ratio spread into a butterfly. This caps your upside profit but eliminates the unlimited risk. Example: buy 1 lot 24,800 CE to create a 24,400/24,600/24,800 broken-wing butterfly.

Time-Based Exit

If you enter a ratio spread for a weekly expiry, plan to exit by Wednesday afternoon at the latest. Holding into Thursday expiry with a naked leg exposes you to gamma risk and pin risk that can rapidly turn the trade against you.

Ratio Spread vs Vertical Spread

Vertical Spread (1:1)

  • Buy 1 call + Sell 1 call at higher strike (bull call spread)
  • Defined risk on both sides: max loss = net debit, max profit = width - debit
  • No margin requirement beyond the debit paid
  • Lower max profit but no possibility of catastrophic loss
  • Better for beginners and risk-averse traders

Ratio Spread (1:2)

  • Buy 1 call + Sell 2 calls at higher strike
  • Higher max profit at the sweet spot (short strike)
  • Can be entered free or for credit
  • Unlimited risk on one side due to the naked short leg
  • Requires margin for the naked leg despite low/zero entry cost
  • Only for experienced traders with active risk management

Common Misconceptions

"A zero-cost ratio spread is a risk-free trade"

Zero cost to enter does not mean zero risk. The unlimited loss potential from the naked leg can far exceed any initial investment. Always calculate your breakeven and worst-case scenario before entering.

"Ratio spreads are just for advanced traders"

While the unlimited risk aspect requires experience, ratio backspreads (buy more than sell) have limited risk and can be suitable for intermediate traders. Understand the difference: ratio spread = sell more (unlimited risk), ratio backspread = buy more (limited risk).

"The probability is in my favor because I profit in a wider range"

While the profit zone may be wide, the tail risk from the unlimited loss side can wipe out months of profits in a single trade. Expected value, not probability alone, determines if a strategy is worth trading.

Greek Profile

Delta

A 1:2 call ratio spread starts with positive Delta (bullish) but Delta turns negative as the underlying crosses the short strike. The position flips from bullish to bearish above the sweet spot.

Gamma

Net negative Gamma due to the extra short option. Near the short strike, Gamma risk is highest. Rapid moves against you accelerate losses. This is the most dangerous aspect of ratio spreads.

Theta

Net positive Theta when the underlying is near the short strike. The 2 short options decay faster than the 1 long option. Time decay works in your favor in the profit zone.

Vega

Net short Vega. Rising IV hurts the position because the 2 short options gain more value than the 1 long option. Enter ratio spreads when IV is elevated and expected to fall.

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