Bear Call Ladder
Also known as: Short Call Ladder
Expecting a very large move to the upside or downside — if the stock rallies dramatically, the two long calls at B and C profit more than the short call at A loses; alternatively, a sharp drop makes all calls expire worthless and you keep the credit
Risk Profile at a Glance
How to Construct the Bear Call Ladder
- 1.Sell 1 call at strike A
- 2.Buy 1 call at strike B
- 3.Buy 1 call at strike C (A < B < C)
- 4.Same expiration
- 5.Net credit typically
Understanding the Bear Call Ladder
The bear call ladder (short call ladder) creates an unusual payoff: it profits from very large moves to the upside (because two long calls outpace the one short call above a certain level) or from a sharp decline (all calls expire worthless, keeping the credit). Between the strikes, there is a loss zone. This is a sophisticated structure used by traders who expect either a crash (credit kept) or a massive rally (long calls dominate), with the loss zone in between. It is rarely used as a primary strategy but appears in complex hedging books.
The "bear" in the name refers to the initial direction of the short call (you are initially delta-negative), but the structure can profit from a large bullish move through the long calls at B and C. Managing the middle-loss zone is critical. Advanced traders use ladders as part of a larger position to add conditional upside exposure at low or zero additional cost..
When to Use It — EdgeOS Signal Integration
- ✓Ideal when SCTR < 4 and EdgeOS bear count = 1 (fresh bear trigger)
- ✓Extension score at or above 0.8 with stock near the upper ATR level
- ✓Confirmed or fluid bearish trend — EMA alignment supports the short side
Compare with Similar Strategies
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Bear Call Ladder options strategy?
The bear call ladder (short call ladder) creates an unusual payoff: it profits from very large moves to the upside (because two long calls outpace the one short call above a certain level) or from a sharp decline (all calls expire worthless, keeping the credit). Between the strikes, there is a loss zone.
When should I use the Bear Call Ladder?
Expecting a very large move to the upside or downside — if the stock rallies dramatically, the two long calls at B and C profit more than the short call at A loses; alternatively, a sharp drop makes all calls expire worthless and you keep the credit
What is the maximum loss on the Bear Call Ladder?
The maximum loss is fully defined at entry: the net debit paid (for debit strategies) or the spread width minus the credit received (for credit spreads). You can never lose more than this amount.
How does the Bear Call Ladder compare to similar strategies?
The Bear Call Ladder is a bearish complex strategy. Compared to the Call Backspread 1x2 (bullish, complex), the Bear Call Ladder has limited max risk and unlimited max reward. Your choice depends on your directional bias, IV environment, and risk tolerance. The TraderValue strategy comparison tool lets you see the exact payoff differences side by side.