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Key Points About Selling Credit Spreads

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A previous post covered debit spreads, when you pay a debit looking for a stock or ETF to move in a certain direction. Credit spreads are just the opposite, with traders collecting premium up front in hope that the stock won’t move a certain way.

What a Credit Spread Is

Credit spreads are the mirror image of debit spreads, with each part of the strategy reversed.

A trader would sell options closer to the money, which are worth more. He or she would also buy an equal number of cheaper contracts further from the money. This will result in an upfront credit.

For example, say stock XYZ is at $100 and a trader expects it to move sideways. There might be some chopping up and down, but they don’t see it going under $95.

He or she could:

  • Sell the $95 puts for $2.
  • Buy the $90 puts for $1.

Including the money coming in and going out, a net credit of $1 will be added to their account.

Being short the $95 puts, the trader will want them to expire worthless. That will happen as long as stock XYZ remains above the $95 strike price.

So why buy the 90 puts? Those are a hedge against being wrong. They may lower the profit potential but also reduce your risk.

Create an Edge with Defined Risk

Remember that put buyers have the right to sell a stock. However put sellers have an obligation to buy shares if they’re under the strike price. This can turn into a potentially huge liability when a big selloff occurs.

For example in the case above, stock XYZ can hypothetically go to zero. That would create a staggering $95 loss per share in an account. While such declines might be rare, they can happen.

The credit spread mitigates this hazard by owning puts at the lower strike. In the case above, the 90 puts would limit potential losses to $5. Not fun, but not fatal either.

Call credit spreads have a similar structure to the upside. Calls near the stock price are sold and cheaper calls are bought at a higher strike. That effectively hedges against a big rally.

Option spreads consist of long and short option positions. Considering exercise and assignment risk is an important part of any option strategy.

Putting Time To Work

Time decay is the basic principle of credit spreads. We know that out-of-the-money options expire worthless. Credit spreads simply capitalize on this process while hedging to limit risk.

Still, there are some nuances. The pace of time decay accelerates closer to expiration, so it often makes sense to sell put spreads with no more than 2-3 weeks until expiration. This can capture the quickest premium destruction. (Which helps traders who are short.)

Second, events like earnings can distort time decay. Instead of premium disappearing at a smooth and predictable rate, it may occur all at once after the news passes. That’s why traders should know companies well before writing credit spreads. It’s important to understand the types of catalysts that can impact share prices.

Getting an Edge with Technical Analysis

Traders are always looking for an edge, or advantage to tilt the odds in their favor.

This is especially true when you’re selling credit spreads because the profits are limited to the income collected up front. You can’t count on a few huge winners to offset losses. Therefore it’s even more important to have positive expectancy.

Technical analysis is one of the most common ways to achieve this. Support and resistance levels can influence where a stock moves, and where it stops moving.

Sellers of credit spreads can benefit from these chart patterns. They might sell put spreads when a stock holds a support level or sell a call spread when it hits resistance.

Alternately, indicators like oscillators can help identify when a move is extended and poised for a reversal. This might include using the Relative Strength Index (RSI) or Bollinger Bands. Traders thinking a stock is oversold could sell put spreads, or call spreads if it appears overbought.

Beware of Volatility

Recent years have featured some dramatic volatility events. These caused painful losses for some traders who sold options to generate income.

While credit spreads include a built-in hedge, it’s also important to realize that they often work better at times of calm. When volatility slams the entire market, certain patterns stop working. Support levels don’t hold and ranges widen. This can throw a giant monkey wrench in a probability-based trading system.

That’s not an argument against credit spreads. It’s just something to bear in mind.

Remember that the goal is to capture time decay — not necessarily to short volatility. That requires predictability, which is easier when swings are less extreme.


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About the author

David Russell is VP of Market Intelligence at TradeStation Group. Drawing on two decades of experience as a financial journalist and analyst, his background includes equities, emerging markets, fixed-income and derivatives. He previously worked at Bloomberg News, CNBC and E*TRADE Financial. Russell systematically reviews countless global financial headlines and indicators in search of broad tradable trends that present opportunities repeatedly over time. Customers can expect him to keep them apprised of sector leadership, relative strength and the big stories – especially those overlooked by other commentators. He’s also a big fan of generating leverage with options to limit capital at risk.