Straddle Strategy: Profit From Big Moves in Either Direction
How a Long Straddle Works
You buy an at-the-money call and an at-the-money put with the same strike and expiration. If the stock surges, the call profits and the put expires worthless. If the stock crashes, the put profits and the call expires worthless. If the stock barely moves, both options lose value from time decay — and you lose.
Straddle Example
NVDA trades at $800. You buy the $800 call for $25 and the $800 put for $22. Total cost: $47 per share ($4,700 per straddle).
| NVDA at Expiration | Call Value | Put Value | Total Value | P&L |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $700 | $0 | $100 | $100 | +$5,300 |
| $753 | $0 | $47 | $47 | $0 (breakeven) |
| $780 | $0 | $20 | $20 | -$2,700 |
| $800 | $0 | $0 | $0 | -$4,700 (max loss) |
| $820 | $20 | $0 | $20 | -$2,700 |
| $847 | $47 | $0 | $47 | $0 (breakeven) |
| $900 | $100 | $0 | $100 | +$5,300 |
Key Levels
Upper Breakeven = Strike + Total Premium = $800 + $47 = $847
Lower Breakeven = Strike – Total Premium = $800 – $47 = $753
Max Profit = Unlimited (upside) or Strike – Premium (downside)
The stock must move at least 5.9% in either direction ($47/$800) just to break even. That’s a high bar — and why straddles are selective, event-driven trades rather than everyday strategies.
When to Use a Straddle
Straddles work when you expect a large move but can’t determine the direction. Common setups include before earnings announcements (binary outcome), before FDA decisions (biotech), around major macro events (Federal Reserve decisions, elections), and on breakout setups where a stock has been consolidating and is about to move.
The critical factor: the actual move must exceed what the market already expects (priced into implied volatility). If IV is already high, the straddle is expensive, and you need an even bigger move to profit.
Long Straddle vs. Long Strangle
| Feature | Long Straddle | Long Strangle |
|---|---|---|
| Strikes | Same strike (ATM call + ATM put) | Different strikes (OTM call + OTM put) |
| Cost | Higher (ATM options are expensive) | Lower (OTM options are cheaper) |
| Breakeven Move Required | Smaller (but more expensive) | Larger (but cheaper entry) |
| Max Loss | Total premium (higher) | Total premium (lower) |
| Best For | Expecting very large move | Expecting large move, budget-conscious |
The Greek Profile of a Straddle
| Greek | Long Straddle Position | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Delta | ~0 (neutral at entry) | No directional bias — profits from movement in either direction |
| Gamma | Positive (high) | Delta increases as stock moves — gains accelerate |
| Theta | Negative (high) | Losing money every day the stock doesn’t move — biggest enemy |
| Vega | Positive (high) | Benefits from rising IV — profits if volatility expands |
A straddle is essentially a bet on realized volatility exceeding implied volatility. You’re long gamma and long vega, paying theta every day. If the stock moves enough (or IV spikes), you profit. If it doesn’t, theta bleeds you dry.
Key Takeaways
- A straddle buys an ATM call and ATM put at the same strike — profits from large moves in either direction.
- Max loss is the total premium paid; the stock must move past both breakevens for the trade to profit.
- Straddles are long gamma, long vega, and short theta — you need movement and/or volatility expansion.
- Best used before binary events where you expect the actual move to exceed market expectations.
- IV crush after events can destroy straddle value even when the stock moves — always compare cost to expected move.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a straddle a good earnings strategy?
It depends on whether the stock moves more than the market expects. The straddle price before earnings reflects the market’s expected move. If the actual move exceeds that, you profit. Historically, most stocks move less than the straddle implies, which is why blindly buying straddles before every earnings is a losing strategy over time.
What is a short straddle?
A short straddle sells both an ATM call and ATM put — the opposite of a long straddle. You collect premium and profit if the stock stays near the strike. The risk is unlimited on the upside and substantial on the downside. Short straddles require high margin and are suited for experienced traders who believe IV is overstated.
How much does a straddle cost?
Straddle cost depends on the stock price, time to expiration, and IV. As a rough guide, a 30-day ATM straddle on a typical stock costs 4-8% of the stock price. High-IV stocks (biotech, meme stocks) can cost 10-15%. The percentage cost equals the minimum percentage move needed to break even.
Straddle vs. iron condor: which is better?
They’re opposite bets. A straddle profits from large moves (long volatility). An iron condor profits from small moves or no movement (short volatility). Neither is inherently better — it depends on your market outlook. Iron condors win more often but profit less per trade; straddles win less often but can produce large gains.
Can I close a straddle early?
Yes. Most traders close straddles before expiration. If the stock moves early and one leg becomes profitable, you can close the entire straddle or just the losing leg. Closing early also avoids the worst of theta decay in the final days. There’s no requirement to hold any option to expiration.