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What are the various types of Option Strategies?

At Webull, we provide a range of options strategies tailored to your investment objectives. To view the available strategies, please click here. Below is a brief overview of each strategy, including maximum gain, maximum loss, breakeven values:




Covered Call

A covered call is an options strategy in which a call option is written against a long stock optoin. It is primarily used to generate income on portfolio holdings in which the investor has a neutral to slightly bullish outlook on. For more description, please click here.


  • Max Gain: Limited to the strike price plus premium received
  • Max Loss: If the stock price drops to $0.00, plus the premium received
  • Breakeven: Stock purchase price minus premium received



Covered Put

A covered put is an options strategy with undefined risk and limited profit potential that combines a short stock position with a short put option. It is primarily used to generate income on short portfolio holdings. For more description, please click here.


  • Max Gain: Distance between short stock cost basis and strike price, plus premium received
  • Max Loss: Unlimited if the stock rises significantly. Loss is reduced by the premium received.
  • Breakeven: Cost basis of the short stock position plus the premium received from selling the put.



Straddle

Involves buying a call and a put at the same strike price and expiration. This strategy is used to profit from significant movement in either direction. For more description, please click here.


  • Max gain: Unlimited
  • Max Loss: Premium paid
  • Breakeven: Upper breakeven is the strike price plus the total premium paid; lower breakeven is the strike price minus the total premium paid.



Strangle

Similar to a straddle but with different strike prices for the call and put, resulting in a less expensive entry, but requiring a greater price movement for profit. For more description, please click here.


  • Max Gain: Unlimited
  • Max Loss: Premium paid
  • Breakeven: Upper breakeven is the strike price plus the total premium paid; lower breakeven is the strike price minus the total premium paid



Collar

Involves holding the underlying stock while buying a protective put and selling a call. This strategy is used to protect against significant losses while limiting potential gains. For more description, please click here.


  • Max Gain: Limited to the difference between the stock price and the strike price of the short call, ± the net premium paid or received.
  • Max Loss: Limited to the difference between the stock price and the strike price of the protective put, ± the net premium paid or received.
  • Breakeven: Stock purchase price ± the net premium paid or received.



Vertical Spread - Credit Spread

A defined-risk, defined-reward strategy set up by selling an option and buying another option of the same type (call or put), with the same expiration date but a different strike price. A put credit spread is set up by selling the higher strike put and buying a lower strike put, while a call credit spread is set up by selling the lower strike call and buying a higher strike call. Vertical credit spreads generate income by collecting a net premium, with profits maximized when the spread expires out-of-the-money. For more description, please click here.


  • Max Gain: The net premium received
  • Max Loss: The difference between the strike prices minus the net premium received
  • Breakeven: Short option strike price plus the premium for calls, minus the premium for puts



Vertical Spread - Debit Spread

A strategy set up by simultaneously buying and selling options of the same type (calls or puts) with the same expiration date but different strike prices. Vertical debit spreads are used to define risk and reduce the cost of a directional options trade. A call debit spread is set up by buying the lower strike and selling the higher strike. A put debit spread is set up by buying the higher strike and selling the lower strike. For more description, please click here.


  • Max Gain: The difference between the strike prices minus the premium paid
  • Max Loss: The net debit paid
  • Breakeven: Long option strike price plus the premium for calls, minus the premium for puts.



Butterfly

A risk-defined strategy set up using either all calls or all puts with the same expiration date. It involves buying one option at a lower strike, selling two options at a middle strike, and buying one option at a higher strike. All strike prices are equidistant. This strategy is designed to profit from low volatility and is typically used when the trader expects the stock to stay near the middle strike at expiration. For more description, please click here


  • Max Gain: Achieved if the stock is exactly at the middle strike at expiration and is equal to the width between strikes minus the net premium paid.
  • Max Loss: Net premium paid
  • Breakeven: Lower breakeven is the lower strike plus the net premium paid; upper breakeven is the higher strike minus the net premium paid.



Iron Butterfly

A defined-risk, four-part strategy made up of a bull put spread and a bear call spread, where the short put and short call share the same strike price. All options have the same expiration date, and the strikes are typically spaced evenly to center around the stock price. This strategy is designed to profit from low volatility, where the underlying stock stays near the strike price of the short options. For more description, please click here


  • Max Gain: Net premium received
  • Max Loss: Limited to the width of the wings (difference between the short and long strikes) minus the net premium received
  • Breakeven: Upper breakeven is the short strike plus the net premium received; lower breakeven is the short strike minus the net premium received.



Condor

A four-leg, risk-defined strategy that uses either all calls or all puts with the same expiration date but different strike prices. It’s structured by buying one lower strike, selling two middle strikes, and buying one higher strike, forming a "wingspread." This strategy profits from low volatility and is often used when a trader expects the underlying stock to stay within a narrow range. For more description, please click here


  • Max Gain: The difference between strike prices minus the debit paid
  • Max Loss: Net debit paid
  • Breakeven: Lower breakeven is the lowest long strike plus the net premium paid, and the upper breakeven is the highest long strike minus the net premium paid.



Iron Condor

A neutral, range-bound options strategy set up using four options: a bull put spread and a bear call spread, with all legs having the same expiration but different strike prices. The short call and short put are placed closer to the stock price, while the long call and long put are placed further out-of-the-money, creating a “wingspan” of protection on both sides. This strategy profits when the underlying stays within the range of the short strikes, and carries limited risk and limited reward. For more description, please click here


  • Max Gain: Net premium received
  • Max Loss: Limited to the difference between the strike prices of either spread (put or call side), minus the net premium received
  • Breakeven: Lower breakeven is the short put strike minus the net premium received, and the upper breakeven is the short call strike plus the net premium received.



Option trading entails significant risk and is not appropriate for all investors. Option investors can rapidly lose the entire value of their investment in a short period of time and incur permanent loss by expiration date. You need to complete an options trading application and get approval on eligible accounts. Please read the Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options before trading options.

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