Bullish (bull call spread) or Bearish (bear put spread) with conviction
| Strategy Type | Directional / Defined Risk |
| Market Outlook | Bullish (bull call spread) or Bearish (bear put spread) with conviction |
| Risk Profile | Limited to net debit paid |
| Reward Profile | Limited to spread width minus debit paid |
| Time Horizon | 7-45 days depending on move expectation |
| Capital Requirement | Low to Moderate (GBP 500 - GBP 3,000 per FTSE 100 spread) |
| Margin Type | Debit only - no margin required beyond premium paid |
| Best Used When | Strong directional conviction, expecting significant move toward target, want defined risk exposure, lower IV environment where buying is favorable |
| Lse Applicability | Excellent for FTSE 100 index options (ICE Futures Europe), which have deep liquidity and tight spreads; suitable for liquid single-stock options, though these are monthly only and thinner. FTSE 250 options are thinly traded; for deep non-FTSE-100 index liquidity, UK retail traders commonly use European Euro STOXX 50 options (Eurex) |
| Fca Compliance | Fully compliant - a standard exchange-traded options spread strategy on FCA/Bank of England-supervised venues (ICE Futures Europe; Eurex for Euro STOXX 50) |
| Lot Sizes | GBP 10 per index point per contract (ICE Futures Europe) • Listed on ICE - verify the current contract multiplier; liquidity is limited • EUR 10 per index point per contract (Eurex); European-listed and EUR-denominated • Typically 1,000 shares per contract; monthly expiries only; verify per stock on ICE |
| Trading Hours | 8:00 AM - 4:30 PM London time (GMT/BST) for FTSE 100; Euro STOXX 50 trades longer hours on Eurex |
| Expiry Considerations | Monthly expiries preferred for adequate time; FTSE 100 weeklies for aggressive plays; avoid holding to the final days |
| Tax Implications | Net premium paid is the capital outlay; option gains are generally subject to Capital Gains Tax (18%/24% above the GBP 3,000 annual exempt amount, 2026/27); there is no Stamp Duty or Securities Transaction Tax on options; frequent, businesslike trading may instead be taxed as trading income (HMRC badges of trade). Listed options are generally not ISA-eligible |
| Liquidity Notes | Best liquidity at ATM and the first few OTM strikes on the FTSE 100; avoid deep OTM strikes with wide spreads, and be cautious with FTSE 250 and single-stock spreads where bid-ask is wide |
A debit spread costs less than an outright call because the sold option offsets part of your cost. This lowers your breakeven and risk. For example, if a call costs 120 points and you sell a higher strike call for 45 points, your cost drops to 75 points. The trade-off is capped profit - you won't benefit from moves beyond your short strike. Use spreads when you have a specific target rather than expecting unlimited upside.
No. Your maximum loss is strictly limited to the net debit paid. Even if the underlying crashes or rallies against you, you cannot lose more than your initial investment. This defined risk is a major advantage of debit spreads over strategies with unlimited risk. The bought option protects you, and the worst case is both options expire worthless.
You can still profit as long as the underlying moves past your breakeven. For a bull call spread, breakeven = long strike + debit. If the underlying rises but stays below your short strike, you have intrinsic value in your long call minus the debit paid. Example: bought 8,800/9,000 for 75 points, underlying at 8,900 at expiry = 100 points intrinsic - 75 = 25 points profit. Not maximum profit, but still profitable.
Generally no. Theta decay accelerates in the final days, making recovery difficult. If you're profitable, take profits at 50-75% of maximum rather than waiting for perfect price action. If you're at a loss with 7-10 DTE remaining, close and move on rather than hoping for last-minute moves. Exception: if the underlying is deep in your profit zone (above the short strike), holding to capture full intrinsic is acceptable.
Use debit spreads when: you have strong directional conviction, expect significant price movement, IV is relatively low (options cheap), and want the underlying to move TO a target. Use credit spreads when: you expect range-bound or mild directional movement, IV is elevated, and you want the underlying to STAY AWAY from certain levels. Debit = betting on movement; credit = betting on stability.
Match spread width to your realistic price target. If you expect the FTSE 100 to rise from 8,800 to 9,000, use a 200-point spread (8,800/9,000). Using a narrower spread (8,800/8,900) caps profit too early; wider (8,800/9,200) requires a move that may not happen. Also consider cost - wider spreads cost more in absolute terms but often have better percentage returns if the target is reached. Balance target realism with cost efficiency.
Roll when: the thesis is still valid but time is running short, you're at partial profit and want to continue exposure, or the position has moved favorably and you want to reposition. Close when: the thesis is invalidated, the stop loss is reached, you've captured 60-75% of max profit, or you've rolled twice already (avoid rolling into oblivion). Calculate the roll cost - if rolling nets a credit or small debit with significant additional time, it's often worthwhile.
Debit spreads have positive vega, so an IV drop hurts. In extreme cases, IV crush can offset price gains. Example: a share rallies 5% after results (good), but IV drops from 60% to 35% (bad). The long call loses value from vega even as it gains from delta. Mitigation: avoid entering debit spreads at extremely high IV (>70th percentile), especially before events. The IV crush risk often outweighs the directional benefit in high-IV environments.
ATM (0.50 delta) is the default - balanced cost, delta, and breakeven. ITM (0.55-0.70 delta) costs more but has higher probability and a lower breakeven; use when highly confident. OTM (0.35-0.45 delta) is cheaper but has lower probability and a higher breakeven; use for lower-conviction, higher-reward plays. Consider: how much can you afford to risk? How big a move do you expect? How confident are you? Match strike selection to your conviction level and risk tolerance.
Track for every trade: entry criteria met, underlying, direction, strikes, DTE at entry, debit paid, IV at entry, exit type (profit/loss/time/invalidation), P&L. Analyse: win rate overall and by setup type, average winner vs average loser, profit factor (gross profit / gross loss), max drawdown. Compare performance by IV level, DTE, spread width. After 30+ trades, patterns emerge showing which setups work best. Refine rules based on data, not emotions - and keep this a transparent, manual review rather than an automated screen.
Bull market: emphasise bull call spreads (60-70% of exposure), position short strikes at resistance levels expecting a breakout. Bear market: emphasise bear put spreads, wider spreads to capture larger moves, more conservative sizing. High volatility: reduce overall exposure (IV spikes can hurt even directional plays), wait for clearer setups. Low volatility: increase exposure, debit spreads are cheap and benefit from potential vol expansion. Track performance by regime to identify where your edge is strongest.
High correlation between underlyings means less diversification benefit. FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 are highly correlated; treating both as separate diversification is a mistake. True diversification requires: different sectors (banks vs energy vs pharma), different markets (UK vs global, e.g., via Euro STOXX 50 or US exposure), different timeframes. Calculate portfolio correlation. When correlation-adjusted VaR exceeds acceptable risk, reduce position count. In a crisis, correlations converge to 1 - always maintain cash reserves.
Debit spreads have positive gamma - favorable moves accelerate. Use this to your advantage: when the underlying moves in your direction and approaches the long strike (where gamma peaks), profits accelerate. This is when to consider taking profits - you've captured the gamma benefit. Conversely, when the underlying moves against you, negative gamma isn't there to accelerate losses (unlike ratio spreads). Monitor gamma to understand how sensitive your P&L is to further movement. High gamma near expiry can cause wild swings - be prepared.
Theoretical edge in efficient markets is zero for pure price prediction. Practical edges come from: 1) the volatility risk premium in reverse - buying when IV is low and capturing expansion (about 1-2% edge), 2) a trend-following edge - entering after confirmation rather than prediction, 3) a technical-analysis edge - proper support/resistance identification improves the hit rate 5-10%, 4) a discipline edge - systematic traders avoid chasing and cutting winners early. Combined, skilled debit spread traders can achieve a 2-5% annual edge over random. Track your actual edge through detailed record-keeping.
Large-cap/Index (FTSE 100, Euro STOXX 50): tightest spreads, best liquidity, standard management applies. Mid-cap: wider bid-ask spreads require limit orders, may need to leg in carefully, allow extra slippage in sizing. Small-cap/illiquid: significant slippage risk, use only if very high conviction, consider outright options instead of spreads. For all: check open interest and bid-ask before entry. If you can't exit at reasonable prices, don't enter. Illiquidity is a hidden risk that becomes apparent only when you need to exit quickly.
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