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Strip

Expecting a large move with a bias toward the downside — want movement in either direction but double exposure if the stock falls

Risk Profile at a Glance

Max Risk
limited
Max Reward
limited
IV Environment
Prefer Low IV (buy premium)
Best Regime
🔴 Bear regime

How to Construct the Strip

  • 1.Buy 1 ATM call
  • 2.Buy 2 ATM puts
  • 3.Same strike and expiration
  • 4.Net debit = cost of all three options

Understanding the Strip

The strip is the bearish counterpart to the strap. You buy 1 call and 2 puts at the same at-the-money strike and expiration, creating asymmetric exposure with twice the sensitivity to a decline versus a rally. If the stock falls, both puts gain value — profit is effectively doubled versus a standard straddle. If the stock rallies, only the single call gains.

Maximum loss is the total premium paid; maximum loss on a sharp decline is limited only by the stock going to zero (substantial profit potential). The strip is used when expecting a large binary event with a bearish directional lean. Like the strap, it is more expensive than a simple straddle due to the extra put. The extra cost is justified when you have high conviction about both the magnitude of movement and its direction (bearish bias).

Ahead of a negative catalyst — regulatory action, a major miss, or a market crisis — the strip captures the directional sensitivity while keeping some upside exposure. The EdgeOS bear count trigger approaching from a high-count bull exhaustion is a potential strip setup signal..

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
EdgeOS tip: Open the workspace terminal to see live SCTR scores, bull/bear counts, and extension scores for all 3,000+ tracked symbols — then match the signal context to this strategy. Open Terminal →

Compare with Similar Strategies

DEBITdirectional
Long Straddle
Expecting a large move in either direction — such as before earnings, a Fed anno
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DEBITbullish
Strap
Expecting a large move with a bias toward the upside — want to profit from movem
View strategy →
COMPLEXbearish
Put Backspread 1x2
Aggressively bearish — expect a large downside move and want leveraged exposure
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Side-by-side comparisonStrip vs Long Straddle

Other Combos & Advanced Strategies

Risk ReversalStrapJade LizardDouble Diagonal
Ready to execute the Strip?

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See live SCTR scores, bull/bear counts, and Saty ATR levels for every stock — then paper trade the Strip with real-time data before committing real capital.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Strip options strategy?

The strip is the bearish counterpart to the strap. You buy 1 call and 2 puts at the same at-the-money strike and expiration, creating asymmetric exposure with twice the sensitivity to a decline versus a rally.

When should I use the Strip?

Expecting a large move with a bias toward the downside — want movement in either direction but double exposure if the stock falls

What is the maximum loss on the Strip?

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 Strip compare to similar strategies?

The Strip is a bearish debit strategy. Compared to the Long Straddle (directional, debit), the Strip has limited max risk and limited 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.

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