ZenEdge / Options Strategy

Broken Wing Butterfly: The Asymmetric Bet

A broken wing butterfly is a butterfly spread with one wing wider than the other. The asymmetry shifts the risk profile. Done right, the trade opens for a credit and one entire side carries no risk. The downside is concentrated on the wider wing side, where the loss can be sharp if price runs through it.

This is a directional defined risk trade dressed up as a butterfly. The directional bias is built into the skew.

The Standard Butterfly Refresher

A standard call butterfly: buy 1 call at strike A, sell 2 calls at strike B, buy 1 call at strike C. Strike B is centered between A and C. All wings are equal width. The trade always opens for a debit. Max profit is at strike B at expiration. Max loss is the debit paid.

How A Broken Wing Differs

Same general structure but the wings are not equal. Example bullish broken wing on a $100 stock:

The upper wing is $10 wide. The lower wing is only $5 wide. That asymmetry means the trade opens for a credit instead of a debit on most setups.

Why It Opens For Credit

The wider upper wing buys cheaper options (further OTM) than the narrower lower wing pays. When you net the long calls and the short call body, the math flips to credit if the wings are skewed enough.

That credit becomes your minimum profit. The trade pays you to put it on.

The Risk Profile

The trade off. No risk on one side. Concentrated risk on the other. You traded uniform risk across both wings for asymmetric exposure that pays you to wait. Most of the time the trade either profits or loses small. The bad scenarios happen when price punches through the wide wing.

Bullish vs Bearish Skew

Bullish broken wing: built with calls, wide wing above the body. Profits if stock stays under the wide wing or sits at the body. Loses if stock blows past the wide wing to the upside.

Bearish broken wing: built with puts, wide wing below the body. Profits if stock stays above the wide wing or sits at the body. Loses if stock crashes through the wide wing.

When To Use It

Slightly directional bias but not certain. Elevated IV makes the credit fatter. 30 to 45 days to expiration for balanced theta and gamma.

Best on liquid underlyings where the multi leg execution does not slip too much. Spy, QQQ, large cap tech names with active options markets.

Management

Take profit at 50% of max profit when possible. If the trade opened for credit and the credit is mostly preserved, close early.

If the price moves toward the body strike, the trade is winning. Hold or take partial profit.

If the price moves toward the wide wing, the trade is losing. Decide: close to limit damage, or roll if the chart has changed.

What Kills It

chartmaster3000 take. Broken wing butterflies are an elegant tool for traders who want premium with a directional lean. The credit is the bait. The wide wing is the trap if you are wrong direction. Use them when you have a real bias and the chart supports it. Skip them as random income plays. The structure rewards conviction, not coin flips.

chartmaster3000

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ZenEdge is a brand under Gant Villagomez Capital. Andrew Villagomez is not a registered investment advisor, broker dealer, financial planner, or fiduciary. Nothing on this page constitutes investment advice or a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security. You are solely responsible for your own trading decisions, position sizing, risk management, and outcomes. Trading involves risk of loss, including total loss of capital.