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Straddle & Strangle

Profit from big moves in either direction. Two powerful volatility strategies every Indian options trader must know.

What Is a Long Straddle?

A Long Straddle involves buying an at-the-money (ATM) call and an ATM put at the same strike price and same expiry. You profit when the underlying makes a large move in either direction. The direction does not matter — only the magnitude.

This is the purest volatility bet in options trading. You are paying premium on both legs, betting that the actual move in the underlying will be larger than what the options market has priced in. It is commonly used before major events on the Indian markets such as the Union Budget, RBI monetary policy decisions, and quarterly earnings of Nifty heavyweights.

The trade-off is simple: you pay a higher upfront cost (two premiums), but you have unlimited profit potential on the upside and substantial profit potential on the downside (until the underlying hits zero). If the market stays flat, both options lose value to time decay, and you lose the entire premium paid.

How It Works

Max Profit = Unlimited (on the upside)
Max Loss = Total Premium Paid × Lot Size
Upper Breakeven = Strike + Total Premium
Lower Breakeven = Strike − Total Premium

Total Premium = Call Premium + Put Premium

Strike = ATM strike price selected for both legs

Lot Size = Number of units per lot (Nifty = 25, Bank Nifty = 15)

Straddle Example

Nifty Long Straddle Before Union Budget

Nifty spot is at 24,500. Union Budget is tomorrow. You expect a big move but are unsure of the direction.

Buy 1 lot Nifty 24,500 CE at ₹200

Buy 1 lot Nifty 24,500 PE at ₹190

Total premium paid = ₹200 + ₹190 = ₹390 per unit

Total cost = ₹390 × 25 (lot size) = ₹9,750

Upper Breakeven = 24,500 + 390 = 24,890

Lower Breakeven = 24,500 − 390 = 24,110

Scenario 1: Nifty rallies to 25,000 (+500 points)

24,500 CE value = ₹500 (intrinsic) | 24,500 PE value = ₹0 (expires worthless)

Net P&L = (500 − 390) × 25 = +₹2,750 profit

Scenario 2: Nifty stays at 24,500 (no move)

Both options expire at or near zero (only time value, which decays).

Net P&L = −₹390 × 25 = −₹9,750 loss (max loss)

Scenario 3: Nifty drops to 24,000 (−500 points)

24,500 PE value = ₹500 (intrinsic) | 24,500 CE value = ₹0 (expires worthless)

Net P&L = (500 − 390) × 25 = +₹2,750 profit

Straddle Payoff Diagram

Long Straddle Payoff (Strike = 24,500 | Premium = 390) 0 -390 +610 23,500 24,110 24,500 24,890 25,500 ATM Lower BE Upper BE Max Loss Profit (Put side) Profit (Call side) P&L

The V-shape shows losses at center (ATM) and profits expanding on both sides as the underlying moves away from the strike.


What Is a Long Strangle?

A Long Strangle involves buying an out-of-the-money (OTM) call and an OTM put with different strike prices but the same expiry. Like a straddle, you profit from a large move in either direction, but the strangle costs less because both options are OTM.

The trade-off: since both options start OTM, the underlying must move further before you reach profitability. The breakeven points are wider apart compared to a straddle. However, the lower cost means your maximum loss is smaller, and the return on investment can be higher if a truly large move occurs.

Strangles are popular among retail traders in India because they require less capital. They are especially common in Bank Nifty weekly options, where large intraday moves are frequent around RBI announcements and banking sector news.

Strangle: How It Works

Max Profit = Unlimited (on the upside)
Max Loss = Total Premium Paid × Lot Size
Upper Breakeven = Higher Strike (Call) + Total Premium
Lower Breakeven = Lower Strike (Put) − Total Premium

Total Premium = OTM Call Premium + OTM Put Premium

Higher Strike = OTM call strike (above current spot)

Lower Strike = OTM put strike (below current spot)

Strangle Example

Nifty Long Strangle Before RBI MPC

Nifty spot is at 24,500. RBI monetary policy decision is tomorrow. You expect a large move.

Buy 1 lot Nifty 24,700 CE at ₹110 (OTM call, 200 points above spot)

Buy 1 lot Nifty 24,300 PE at ₹100 (OTM put, 200 points below spot)

Total premium paid = ₹110 + ₹100 = ₹210 per unit

Total cost = ₹210 × 25 = ₹5,250 (46% cheaper than the straddle)

Upper Breakeven = 24,700 + 210 = 24,910

Lower Breakeven = 24,300 − 210 = 24,090

Scenario 1: Nifty rallies to 25,200 (+700 points)

24,700 CE value = ₹500 (intrinsic) | 24,300 PE value = ₹0

Net P&L = (500 − 210) × 25 = +₹7,250 profit

Scenario 2: Nifty stays between 24,300 and 24,700 (range-bound)

Both options expire worthless.

Net P&L = −₹210 × 25 = −₹5,250 loss (max loss)

Scenario 3: Nifty drops to 23,800 (−700 points)

24,300 PE value = ₹500 (intrinsic) | 24,700 CE value = ₹0

Net P&L = (500 − 210) × 25 = +₹7,250 profit

Strangle Payoff Diagram

Long Strangle Payoff (Strikes: 24,300 PE / 24,700 CE | Premium = 210) 0 -210 +590 23,500 24,090 24,300 24,700 24,910 25,500 Lower BE Upper BE Max Loss Zone Profit (Put side) Profit (Call side) P&L

The strangle has a wider flat loss zone (between the two strikes) but a lower maximum loss compared to the straddle. Breakeven points are further apart.


Straddle vs Strangle

Long Straddle

  • Cost: Higher (two ATM premiums)
  • Max Loss: ₹9,750 (in our example)
  • Breakevens: Closer together (24,110 – 24,890)
  • Move needed: 1.6% from spot to break even
  • Delta: Near zero at entry (balanced)
  • Vega: Higher (more IV sensitive)
  • Ideal for: Moderate to large expected moves

Long Strangle

  • Cost: Lower (two OTM premiums)
  • Max Loss: ₹5,250 (in our example)
  • Breakevens: Further apart (24,090 – 24,910)
  • Move needed: 1.7% from spot to break even
  • Delta: Near zero at entry (balanced)
  • Vega: Lower (less IV sensitive)
  • Ideal for: Large expected moves, limited capital
Feature Straddle Strangle
Strike Selection Same strike (ATM) Different strikes (OTM)
Premium Cost Higher Lower
Breakeven Distance Narrower Wider
Probability of Profit Higher Lower
ROI on Big Move Lower (higher cost base) Higher (lower cost base)
Theta Decay Faster (ATM has most Theta) Slower (OTM decays less initially)
Vega Exposure Higher Lower
Gamma Exposure Higher (ATM Gamma is peak) Lower

Short Straddle & Short Strangle

The short versions of these strategies involve selling (writing) the options instead of buying them. You collect premium upfront and profit if the underlying stays within a range. These are popular income strategies among experienced Indian traders, but they carry significant risk.

Short Straddle

Sell ATM call + Sell ATM put at the same strike and expiry. You collect the total premium and profit if Nifty stays near the strike at expiry. Maximum profit equals the total premium collected, but maximum loss is theoretically unlimited on the upside and substantial on the downside.

Example: Sell Nifty 24,500 CE at ₹200 + Sell 24,500 PE at ₹190 = Collect ₹390 per unit = ₹9,750 per lot. You keep this if Nifty expires between 24,110 and 24,890.

Short Strangle

Sell OTM call + Sell OTM put at different strikes. You collect less premium than a short straddle but have a wider profit zone. This is the most popular premium-selling strategy on NSE and is often called the “bread and butter” of professional option sellers.

Example: Sell Nifty 24,700 CE at ₹110 + Sell 24,300 PE at ₹100 = Collect ₹210 per unit = ₹5,250 per lot. You keep this if Nifty stays between 24,090 and 24,910.

Margin Requirements on NSE

Short straddles and strangles require significant margin because of the naked short options. For Nifty, SEBI mandates SPAN margin + Exposure margin. A short strangle on Nifty typically requires ₹1,00,000 to ₹1,50,000 in margin per lot, depending on volatility levels and proximity of strikes to spot.

During high-volatility events (elections, budget), NSE may impose additional margins of 5-10%, further increasing the capital requirement. Always check your broker’s margin calculator before entering short volatility positions.

Risk Warning: Short straddles and strangles have unlimited loss potential. A single large gap move (like the 2020 COVID crash or a surprise rate hike) can wipe out months of premium collection. These strategies are not suitable for beginners.


When to Use Each

These volatility strategies work best before known events that are likely to cause large price moves on NSE. Here are the key catalysts:

Before Quarterly Earnings

Infosys, TCS, Reliance, and HDFC Bank results often move Nifty 100-300 points. Enter 2-3 days before results when IV has not fully spiked yet. Use stock-specific straddles on high-beta names.

Before Union Budget

The annual budget (February 1) is the biggest single-day event for Indian markets. Nifty has moved 300-800 points on budget day in recent years. Straddles entered 3-5 days before have historically outperformed.

Before RBI MPC Decisions

RBI monetary policy announcements (6 times per year) impact Bank Nifty heavily. Surprise rate changes can move Bank Nifty 500-1,000 points. Consider Bank Nifty straddles/strangles for these events.

Before General Elections

Lok Sabha election results are the most volatile event for Indian equities. In 2024, Nifty moved over 1,400 points on the result day. Long straddles or strangles with monthly expiry work best for election trades.

During High India VIX

When India VIX is above 18-20, markets are pricing in large moves. However, buying straddles when VIX is already elevated is risky due to IV crush. Instead, look for situations where VIX is moderate (12-15) and expected to spike.

Before Global Events

US Fed decisions, geopolitical events (China-Taiwan, Middle East), and global economic data releases can trigger large moves on Indian markets. Enter positions the day before the event with next-week expiry for sufficient time.

Timing & Implied Volatility

Understanding implied volatility (IV) is critical to straddle and strangle trading. These strategies are as much a bet on IV as they are on price movement.

Enter When IV Is Low (Before the Event)

The ideal time to buy a straddle or strangle is when IV is relatively low and expected to rise. This typically means 3-5 days before a major event, when the market has not yet fully priced in the upcoming volatility. Check India VIX, and compare current IV of the specific options to their historical range. If IV is in the lower 25th percentile of its 30-day range, it is a good entry point.

Exit When IV Spikes (After the Event)

If IV spikes significantly before the event (sometimes it happens 1-2 days before), you can exit with a profit from Vega gains alone, even without a large move in the underlying. This is known as “selling the IV spike” and is a common technique among professional traders. Monitor the IV percentile and exit when it reaches the upper range.

IV Crush Danger

The biggest risk for straddle/strangle buyers is IV crush — the sharp drop in implied volatility that occurs immediately after a major event. Even if the underlying moves in your favor, the collapse in IV can offset or exceed your directional gains.

Example: Before the Union Budget, Nifty 24,500 CE is trading at ₹200 with IV of 18%. After the budget, even if Nifty moves to 24,600 (+100 points), the CE might only be worth ₹150 because IV has crashed to 12%. You lose ₹50 despite being right on direction.

Rule of thumb: If you are buying straddles/strangles to hold through the event, the underlying must move more than the expected move (priced into the straddle cost) for you to profit.


Common Mistakes

"I'll hold the straddle through the event and profit from the directional move"

IV crush after the event can destroy your position even if the direction is right. The underlying needs to move more than the total premium paid (the “expected move”) for the trade to be profitable. Most of the time, the event move is already priced in. Consider exiting before the event if IV has already spiked, or size your position expecting that most event-driven straddles are losers.

"Straddles always work before big events because markets always move"

Markets price in expected moves through IV. If India VIX is at 22 before the budget, the straddle premium already reflects a 400+ point expected move. Unless the actual move exceeds this, you lose. Historically, about 60-70% of straddles bought before events lose money. Check if the implied move (straddle price as % of spot) is reasonable relative to historical event-day moves.

"I'll use weekly expiry straddles because they're cheaper"

Weekly options have extreme Theta decay, especially in the last 2-3 days. A Thursday-expiry straddle bought on Wednesday loses value extremely fast. If the event does not cause an immediate large move, time decay destroys the position before it can recover. Use next-week or monthly expiry for event-based straddles to give yourself more time and reduce Theta burn.

"Position sizing doesn't matter — my max loss is just the premium"

While max loss is limited to premium paid, losing ₹9,750 per lot on a straddle adds up quickly when you trade multiple lots. Many traders over-leverage on “sure thing” events and take 3-5 lots, turning a ₹10,000 loss into ₹50,000. Never risk more than 2-3% of your trading capital on a single straddle/strangle trade. If your capital is ₹5,00,000, keep the total premium to ₹10,000-15,000 maximum.

"I don't need an exit plan — I'll just wait for expiry"

Holding to expiry maximizes your Theta loss. Professional straddle traders set clear exit rules: exit at 50% profit, exit at 30% loss, or exit the day after the event regardless of outcome. Waiting and hoping is not a strategy. Define your exit before entry. Set specific price targets or time-based exits (e.g., exit by 11 AM on event day if move has occurred).

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