Straddles & Strangles

Advanced ⏱ 17 min read

Introduction: Betting on Volatility

Unlike vertical spreads which profit from directional moves or range-bound conditions, straddles and strangles profit from volatility itself. They're ideal when you expect large price moves but don't know the direction. The classic use case is earnings: when a company reports results, the stock often moves 3-5% in one direction or another, but you can't predict which.

These strategies require understanding volatility crush, expected moves, and proper position sizing. Get them right and you'll capture earnings moves. Get them wrong and you'll suffer from the post-earnings volatility collapse.

Long Straddle: Buying ATM Call and Put

The Basic Structure

A long straddle consists of buying both a call and a put at the same strike price:

Long Straddle = Buy ATM Call + Buy ATM Put

Profit Scenario: Stock moves significantly in either direction
Loss Scenario: Stock stays flat or moves less than debit paid
Best Market: High IV, expect large move

Real Example: Earnings Straddle

Setup: AAPL is about to report earnings. Stock is at $195. Earnings are in 14 days. You expect a 4-5% move (±$8-$10).

Position:
  • Buy 195 call for $6.50 = -$650
  • Buy 195 put for $5.80 = -$580
  • Total debit: $12.30 = $1,230
  • Breakeven up: $195 + $12.30 = $207.30
  • Breakeven down: $195 - $12.30 = $182.70
  • Required move to profit: $12.30 each direction (6.3%)

Straddle Pricing and Expected Moves

Market makers price straddles based on the expected move. If AAPL typically moves 4% on earnings, the straddle cost will reflect that. To profit, the actual move must exceed the straddle cost:

Stock Move Call Value Put Value Total Value P&L
No move ($195) $0 (OTM) $0 (OTM) $0 -$1,230 (max loss)
3% down ($189) $0 $600 $600 -$630 (partial loss)
6% down ($183) $0 $1,200 $1,200 -$30 (near break-even)
10% down ($175.50) $0 $1,950 $1,950 +$720 (profit)
10% up ($214.50) $1,950 $0 $1,950 +$720 (profit)

Long Strangle: Buying OTM Call and Put

The Basic Structure

A strangle is similar to a straddle but uses out-of-the-money options, making it cheaper upfront:

Long Strangle = Buy OTM Call + Buy OTM Put

Advantage: Lower cost than straddle
Disadvantage: Requires larger move to profit
Best Market: Very high IV, expect large move

Real Example: Earnings Strangle

Setup: AAPL at $195, same earnings scenario as straddle example.

Position (Using OTM Options):
  • Buy 200 call (OTM by $5) for $3.20 = -$320
  • Buy 190 put (OTM by $5) for $2.90 = -$290
  • Total debit: $6.10 = $610
  • Breakeven up: $200 + $6.10 = $206.10
  • Breakeven down: $190 - $6.10 = $183.90
  • Required move: 5.6% up or 5.6% down (vs. 6.3% for straddle)

Strangle vs. Straddle Comparison

Factor Straddle Strangle
Initial Cost Higher ($1,230) Lower ($610)
Move Required 6.3% in either direction 5.6% (to $200 or $190)
Probability of Profit Lower (move must exceed premium) Lower (wider but OTM)
Max Loss Full premium ($1,230) Full premium ($610)
Best Use Stock expected to move significantly Stock might move, want lower cost

The Volatility Crush Problem

Why Straddles/Strangles Fail After Earnings

The biggest risk to straddles is volatility crush. Before earnings, implied volatility (IV) is high, inflating option prices. After earnings (whether the move meets expectations or not), IV collapses as uncertainty is resolved.

Volatility Crush Scenario:

Before Earnings (March 5):
IV Rank: 85% (very high, pre-earnings)
AAPL 195 straddle cost: $12.30

After Earnings (March 6):
AAPL rises to $198 (+1.5%, within normal range)
IV Rank: 45% (collapsed post-earnings)
New straddle value: $4.20

Your P&L:
Stock movement profit: +$300 (from move)
Volatility crush loss: -$800 (IV compression)

Net: -$500 loss despite profitable stock move!

Managing Volatility Crush

  • Close BEFORE earnings: Don't hold through the event; close positions the day before to avoid crush
  • Trade high-move events: FDA approvals, lawsuit decisions create definitive moves that don't reverse as much
  • Close 50% profit early: If the straddle gains 50% before earnings, close it and take the win
  • Size smaller: Accept smaller absolute gains to reduce absolute losses from crush

Short Straddles and Short Strangles

Selling Volatility

Just as you can buy straddles (betting on high volatility), you can sell them (betting on low volatility or collapse):

Short Straddle = Sell ATM Call + Sell ATM Put

Profit Scenario: Stock stays flat or moves less than premium collected
Loss Scenario: Stock moves significantly
Best Market: Low IV, expect stability

Real Example: Post-Earnings Short Straddle

Setup: Day after AAPL earnings. Stock settled at $198. IV has collapsed from 85% to 40%.

Position (Selling the crash):
  • Sell 198 call for $2.80 = +$280
  • Sell 198 put for $2.60 = +$260
  • Total credit: $5.40 = $540
  • Breakeven up: $198 + $5.40 = $203.40
  • Breakeven down: $198 - $5.40 = $192.60
  • Profit zone: Stock stays between $192.60 - $203.40

Short straddles are typically safer than long straddles post-earnings because IV has already crushed. However, assignment risk is significant—if the stock moves beyond the strikes, you're forced to take a position.

When to Buy vs. Sell Vol

Condition IV Rank Action Strategy
Before major event (earnings, FDA) High (75%+) Buy straddle/strangle Long straddle
Immediately after event Dropping (from high) Sell vol or avoid Close long positions or short straddle
Stable, quiet period Low (20%) Sell straddle/strangle Short straddle
Anticipation building Rising (from low) Close short vol positions Exit short straddles

Expected Move Calculations

Using IV to Estimate Movement

Market makers use a formula to estimate the expected move based on IV:

Expected Move ≈ Stock Price × IV × √(Days to Expiration / 365)
Example:
Stock: $195
IV: 45%
Days to expiration: 14 (= 0.038 years)

Expected move = $195 × 0.45 × √(14/365)
= $195 × 0.45 × 0.196
= $17.21

This means market expects AAPL to move approximately $17 in either direction by expiration. That's an 8.8% move, matching the actual ±$8-10 expected move estimate from earlier.

Real Earnings Straddle Example: Full Scenario

Setup Date: March 5, 2026 (Day Before Earnings)
AAPL stock: $195
Days to expiration: 9 (options expire after announcement)
IV Rank: 92% (very high, pre-earnings)

Position Built:
Buy 195 call for $8.40
Buy 195 put for $7.20
Total debit: $15.60 = $1,560

Scenario A: Stock up 8% to $210.60
After earnings, IV collapses to 35%
195 call worth: $15.60 (ITM by $15.60)
195 put worth: $0 (OTM, expired)
Intrinsic value: $15.60
But extrinsic value crush means market value ~$14.50
P&L: -$100 (you paid $1,560, position worth $1,460)

Lesson: Even with a huge 8% move, you can lose money to volatility crush!

Scenario B: Stock up 15% to $224.25 (extreme move)
195 call worth: $29.25 (full intrinsic value)
195 put worth: $0
Position value: $2,925
P&L: +$1,365 profit

Lesson: You need a HUGE move to overcome straddle cost + volatility crush.

Key Takeaways

1. Straddles and strangles profit from volatility, not direction. Perfect for earnings and events.

2. Volatility crush is the biggest enemy. IV drops after events, killing straddle value even with profitable moves.

3. Close straddles BEFORE the event, not after. Capture IV expansion without suffering crush.

4. Strangles cost less but require bigger moves. Choose based on expected move size.

5. Short straddles work best post-event. IV has already crushed; you're selling a dead vol market.

6. Use expected move formula to size positions. Required move should match historical or implied move.

Test Your Knowledge

1. What is a long straddle?
A) Buy call, sell put
B) Buy ATM call and ATM put
C) Sell call, sell put
D) Buy call, buy OTM put
2. What is the main advantage of a strangle over a straddle?
A) Higher profit potential
B) Lower cost to establish
C) No volatility risk
D) Better for earnings
3. What is "volatility crush"?
A) When a stock price crashes
B) When implied volatility drops after an event, hurting long straddle value
C) When a merger is announced
D) When options expire worthless
4. When is the best time to close a long straddle bought before earnings?
A) Right after earnings are announced
B) The day before earnings to avoid volatility crush
C) At expiration
D) Never close early
5. You buy a $195 straddle for $12.30. What stock move is required to break even?
A) $5.00 in either direction
B) $12.30 in either direction
C) $6.15 in either direction
D) Any move breaks even