Short Put

A bullish/neutral income strategy where you sell a put. Risk is significant if price falls; often used as a “buy at lower price” approach.

When to use

  • You are okay buying the underlying at an effective lower price
  • You want to earn premium income
  • You can handle margin and drawdowns
Warning

Short puts can lose heavily in sharp selloffs. Use defined-risk alternatives (put spreads) if you are learning.

Practical deep‑dive

Info

Profile

Best suited for a bullish or mildly bullish view.

Strategy snapshot (quick)

FieldValue
Stylesingle short
Cost typeTypically a credit/income-style structure (you receive premium).
Best whenYou have strong conviction and can manage risk/margin actively (not beginner-friendly).
Watch outTail risk + margin stress; losses can be large and fast.

Greeks to watch

Focus on these exposures first

GreekWhy it matters
DeltaAdverse moves can grow risk quickly
GammaRisk can accelerate near expiry
VegaIV spikes can expand losses

Professional options traders focus on “structure first”: define risk, choose strikes/liquidity, and write down exit rules before entry. Most losses come from oversized positions and holding short-dated options without a plan.

Execution checklist

Use this before placing the trade

CheckWhy it mattersQuick test
LiquiditySpreads can eat edgeTight bid‑ask + decent volume/OI
Risk definedPrevents blow-upsMax loss is known and acceptable
Time horizonAvoid time mismatchExpiry matches your view timeframe
Volatility regimePremium cost changes outcomesIV not extreme vs recent range
Exit planStops emotional decisionsTarget/stop/time exit written down

Mistakes to avoid

  • Trading illiquid strikes (wide spreads) because premium looks “cheap”.
  • Using market orders during fast moves and getting poor fills.
  • Adding to losing positions without a predefined rule.
  • Ignoring event risk (results, policy events) near expiry.
  • Overusing weekly expiries before mastering risk control.

Summary (takeaways)

  • Prefer defined-risk structures while learning.
  • Liquidity and execution quality matter as much as strategy selection.
  • Consistency comes from process, not predictions.

Frequently Asked Questions

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