ZenEdge / Options Strategy

Reverse Iron Condor: Paying For The Move

A reverse iron condor flips the standard iron condor inside out. Instead of selling premium and betting the stock stays put, you buy premium and bet the stock moves a lot. Either direction works. Sideways is the loser.

The structure pays you for volatility expansion. Best opened before binary events where you know a big move is coming but cannot tell which way.

The Structure

Example on a $100 stock:

The Payoff

Stock at $90 or below: max profit on the put spread, calls expire worthless. Net $300 profit.

Stock between $90 and $95: partial profit on the put spread, scaling down to break even at $97.

Stock between $95 and $105: all four options expire worthless or near worthless. Max loss of $200.

Stock between $105 and $110: partial profit on the call spread, scaling up from $103 break even.

Stock at $110 or above: max profit on the call spread, puts expire worthless. Net $300 profit.

The two break evens. Upper break even is the long call strike plus debit paid. Lower break even is the long put strike minus debit paid. Between those two break evens, the trade loses. Outside them, the trade wins.

When To Use It

Before earnings on a stock with historical big moves. The market often underprices the expected move and a reverse iron condor pays if the move exceeds expectations.

Before FDA decisions, drug approval announcements, court rulings. Any binary event with a wide range of outcomes.

When IV is low and you expect it to expand. Volatility expansion alone can profit even before the move materializes.

When NOT To Use It

Management

Take profit at 50 to 75% of max profit when one wing pays off. The other wing is dead at that point.

If the trade is at max loss with time remaining, decide: hold for a possible late move, or close to preserve some debit.

If the event passes and the stock barely moved, close immediately. Holding past the catalyst is just waiting for theta to take the rest.

The Math Versus A Long Strangle

A long strangle (buy OTM put and OTM call) pays unlimited upside on the move. A reverse iron condor caps both wings but costs less upfront.

Reverse iron condor: cheaper to open, capped profit, defined risk.

Long strangle: more expensive, uncapped profit, defined risk.

Use reverse iron condor when you expect a contained move (1 to 3 standard deviations). Use long strangle when you expect the move could be enormous.

chartmaster3000 take. Reverse iron condor is a volatility play, not a directional play. It works when the stock moves enough to overcome the debit paid. It fails when the market prices the expected move correctly and the stock stays inside that range. The hardest part is finding setups where the implied move is meaningfully smaller than the realized move tends to be. That edge is rare. When you find it, the structure works.

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.