Condor Selling

The condor is basically a combination of a bull call spread and a bear call spread.

Essentially, options with consecutive strike prices, buying options with a lower exercise price, and options with higher exercise price. The condor is generally created using the same numbers of short and long calls (or puts).

You will nee to have a total of 4 kegs to construct a condor options strategy and you will need a net debit to put on the position.

This is what a basic Condor looks like

Sell 1 In The Money (ITM) Call

Buy 1 In The Money (ITM) Call ( do this one at a Lower Strike)

Sell 1 Out The Money ( OTM) Call

Buy 1 Out The Money (OTM) Call (do this one at a Higher Strike)

The main characteristics of the Condor is that it has limited risk and limited upside.

Similar Posts

  • Moneyness

    This is basically the amount of intrinsic value that an options contract has. In other words, it is the relationship between the strike price of the option and the price of the underlying asset. See at-the-money and Deep in-the-money.

  • Bid-Ask Spread

    This is the difference between the current bid price and the current asking, or offering price. For example, if you see a quote that looks like this: 2.05 x 3.10 – what this means is that the bid is 2.05 and the ask is 3.10. Therefore the bid-ask thread is 1.05 i.e the difference between…

  • Assignment 

    When an option seller or writer receives an exercise notice, assignment has occurred. When assigned, writers must deliver the goods (shares or cash). For example, let’s say you sold 1 AAPL 145.00 CALL and the buyer decides to exercise the contract at expiration because AAPL is now trading at 146, you would need to deliver…

  • Out Of The Money

    These are options contract with no intrinsic value. A Call option is OTM when the strike price is above the current market price. A Put option is out-of-the-money when their strike price is below the current market price of the current market price. You should also check out In The Money Options & At the…

Leave a Reply