A long straddle involves simultaneously buying an at-the-money call and an at-the-money put at the same strike price. You profit from large moves in either direction while risking only the premium paid. This is the purest volatility play—you don't care about direction, only magnitude of movement.
Quick Stats:
A long straddle consists of two ATM options at the same strike:
Long ATM Put:
Long ATM Call:
You pay maximum premium (ATM options most expensive) but get maximum sensitivity to movement in either direction.
ComponentExampleAmountBuy $100 put (ATM)-$5.00-$500Buy $100 call (ATM)-$5.00-$500Net Debit$1,000Max LossDebit paid$1,000Max ProfitUnlimitedUnlimited
Breakevens: $90 and $110
Look for:
Example: Tech company earnings with massive guidance uncertainty—could beat big or miss big.
ATM strike selection:
Why ATM?
Example: Stock at $99.80
Recommended: 30-45 days for most catalyst plays, giving some time for follow-through.
Quick calculation:
Example:
Formula: Total premium paid
Example:
Occurs when: Stock closes exactly at strike price at expiration (both options expire worthless).
Formula:
Example:
Reality: Most traders exit at 50-150% profit, not waiting for expiration.
Lower breakeven: Strike - total premium
Upper breakeven: Strike + total premium
Example:
Stock must move more than 10% in either direction to profit at expiration.
Example: $100 Long Straddle for $10.00 debit
Stock Price at ExpirationResult$50Large profit: +$4,000$80Profit: +$1,000$90Breakeven: $0$90-$100Loss: $0 to -$1,000$100Max loss: -$1,000$100-$110Loss: -$1,000 to $0$110Breakeven: $0$120Profit: +$1,000$150Large profit: +$4,000
Key insight: Losses peak at exact strike, profits accelerate exponentially with distance from strike.
Setup: META Earnings Volatility
Trade:
Management:
Outcome:
What went wrong?
Lesson: Straddles are expensive. Even "big" moves may not be enough if IV crushes hard.
Long straddles have zero net delta at ATM strike.
Example at $100:
As stock moves:
Meaning: Position becomes directional as stock moves, accelerating gains.
Maximum negative theta of any long options strategy.
Example:
Reality: Time is crushing you from both sides. Need fast move.
Maximum positive gamma at ATM strike.
Example:
Massive positive vega with two ATM options.
Double-edged sword:
Before catalyst:
After catalyst:
Strategy: Enter while IV low, exit before IV crush or ensure move is massive.
Profit Target Guidelines:
Example:
Why exit at 100%? Doubling your money is excellent. Theta will eat gains if you wait for more.
If profitable before event:
Option 1: Exit Completely
Option 2: Close Losing Side
Option 3: Take Partial Profits
Immediate post-earnings/event:
If stock moved significantly:
If stock didn't move enough:
If stock moved but need more time:
Roll losing side:
Risk: Paying more premium on already expensive trade.
FactorLong StraddleLong StrangleCostMuch higher ($1,000)Lower ($300)Move RequiredSmaller (10%)Larger (13%+)Max LossHigherLowerSensitivityMaximum (ATM)Moderate (OTM)GammaMaximumModerateWin RateHigher (~45%)Lower (~35%)
Use straddle when: Expect 10-15% move, willing to pay premium for sensitivity
Use strangle when: Expect 15%+ massive move, want to pay less
Timeline:
Why: You bought when IV was inflated. The expected move was already priced in.
Strategy 1: Enter Early (Best)
Strategy 2: Play Only Low IV Stocks
Strategy 3: Sell Before Event
Strategy 4: Understand Expected Move
Conservative due to high cost:
Formula: (Account × 2%) ÷ Straddle Cost = Number of Straddles
Examples:
Account SizeMax Risk (2%)Straddle CostMax Straddles$25,000$500$1,0000 (too expensive)$50,000$1,000$1,0001$100,000$2,000$1,0002$250,000$5,000$1,0005
For earnings plays: Consider using 1% instead of 2% due to IV crush risk.
Never put more than 5% of account in straddles at one time.
Perfect scenarios:
Example: Cloud company reporting—either crushing estimates or missing badly.
Drug approvals:
Expected moves: Often 40-60% on small/mid-cap biotech
Multiple bidders:
Example: Company has $50 offer, rumored $65 competing bid, or deal falls through to $40.
Court rulings:
Example: Tech patent case—win = $30/share gain, lose = $25/share loss.
Market-moving releases:
Strategy: Buy SPY or QQQ straddles before major data releases.
Stock at $102.50:
Option 1: Use $102.50 strike if available
Option 2: Use $100 or $105
Most traders: Use nearest strike with most volume.
If entering 4 weeks early:
Risk: Paying additional premium to adjust.
❌ IV at 100%, paying $2,000 for straddle
✅ IV crush destroys 60% even on 15% move
Fix: Enter 4-6 weeks early or don't play
❌ "Stock will eventually move"
✅ Losing $50/day waiting, down 50% before move
Fix: Only buy straddles with clear catalyst coming soon
❌ Up 100%, holding for 300%
✅ Theta erodes back to breakeven
Fix: Double your money = sell immediately
❌ Holding post-earnings hoping for continued move
✅ IV crushed, theta accelerating, bleeding out
Fix: Exit within 1 hour of catalyst event
❌ Straddle costs 12%, historical moves are 10%
✅ Mathematically impossible to profit
Fix: Only play when you expect move significantly larger than straddle cost
Timeline:
Advantage: Never face IV crush, pure vega play.
If slightly bearish:
Cost: 1.5x normal straddle
Benefit: Extra profit if bearish bias correct
If slightly bullish:
Cost: 1.5x normal straddle
Benefit: Extra profit if bullish bias correct
Before entering any long straddle:
✅ Major catalyst identified with specific date/time
✅ Historical moves average 10%+ on similar events
✅ IV Rank <50 (not already inflated)
✅ Strike at or closest to current stock price (ATM)
✅ Expiration 30-45 DTE (or week after catalyst)
✅ Exit plan at 100% profit
✅ Exit plan immediately post-catalyst
✅ Position size ≤ 2% account risk (1% for earnings)
✅ Prepared to lose entire premium
✅ Understand IV crush dynamics
✅ Expected move > straddle cost as % of stock price
A long straddle involves buying both an ATM call and an ATM put at the same strike and expiration. You pay a net debit (the total of both premiums). The trade profits from large moves in either direction — if the stock rises significantly, the call profits; if it falls significantly, the put profits. The maximum loss is the total premium paid, realized when the stock closes exactly at the strike at expiration.
Buy long straddles before anticipated high-volatility events where you expect a large but uncertain directional move: earnings announcements, FDA decisions, Fed rate decisions, M&A rumors, or major product launches. Crucially, enter BEFORE implied volatility rises (not after) — if IV is already elevated before the event, the premium will be expensive and may not recover even if the stock moves (IV crush after the event).
Upper breakeven = strike + total premium paid. Lower breakeven = strike − total premium paid. For example: buy $100 call for $3 and $100 put for $2 = $5 total premium → upper breakeven = $105; lower breakeven = $95. The stock must move beyond $105 or below $95 for the trade to profit at expiration.
Both profit from large moves. A straddle uses ATM options (same strike for call and put), which is more expensive but requires a smaller absolute move to be profitable. A strangle uses OTM options (different strikes), which is cheaper but requires a larger move to break even. Straddles have higher probability of some profit from any move; strangles need the stock to move past wider breakevens.
This depends on your goal. If you bought the straddle before an event (like earnings), the IV will drop sharply immediately after the event (IV crush). Even if the stock moves substantially, the IV collapse can reduce the option's value significantly. Many experienced traders close one leg of the straddle immediately after the event (closing the losing leg and holding the profitable one) to capture the move before IV crush eliminates the remaining value.
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