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Gavin McMaster

3 Bear Put Spread Trade Ideas For This Thursday

A bear put spread is a vertical spread that aims to profit from a stock declining in price. It has a bearish directional bias as hinted in the name. Unlike the bear call spread, it suffers from time decay so traders need to be correct on the direction of the underlying and also the timing.

A bear put spread is created through buying an out-of-the-money put and selling a further out-of-the-money put.

The maximum profit is equal to the distance between the strikes, less the premium paid. The loss is limited to the premium paid.

With the market looking a bit extended here, it could be a good idea to add some bearish trades to your options portfolio.

Let’s take a look at Barchart’s Bear Put Spread Screener for today:

Some interesting trades here with impressive Max Profit Percentage. 

Let’s strengthen our bearish screener by adding a parameter for any stock with a Sell rating greater than 40%. Here are the results:

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Description automatically generated with medium confidence

Let’s take a look at the first item in the table – a bear put spread on Intel (INTC).

INTC Bear Put Spread Example

Using the September 20 expiry, this trade involves buying the $31 put and selling the $23 put.

The price for the trade is $2.13 which means the trader would pay $213 to enter the trade. This is also the maximum loss. The maximum gain be calculated by taking the width between the strikes and subtracting the premium paid:

8 – 2.13 x 100 = $587.

The breakeven price for the trade is equal to the long put strike, less the premium. In this case, that gives us a breakeven price of $28.87.

The Barchart Technical Opinion rating is a 88% Sell with a Weakening short term outlook on maintaining the current direction.

Long term indicators fully support a continuation of the trend.

Of the 34 Analysts following INTC there are 4 Strong Buy, 2 Moderate Buy, 25 Hold and 3 Strong Sell recommendations.

CLF Bear Put Spread Example

The CLF example is using the November 15 expiry and involves buying the $15 strike put and selling the $11 strike put.

The cost of the trade is $144, which is also the maximum loss with the maximum possible gain being $256. The maximum gain would occur if Cleveland-Cliffs (CLF) stock fell below $11 on the expiration date.

The Barchart Technical Opinion rating is an 88% Sell with a Strengthening short term outlook on maintaining the current direction..

CLF is showing an IV Percentile of 39% and an IV Rank of 25.63%. The current level of implied volatility is 37.65% compared to a 52-week high of 57.57% and a low of 30.79%.

Of the 12 Analysts following CLF there are 2 Strong Buy, 7 Hold and 3 Strong Sell recommendations.

Let’s look at another example, this time on Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY).

BMY Bear Put Spread Example

The BMY example is using the November 11expiry and involves buying the $41 strike put and selling the $35 strike put.

The cost of the trade is $222 which is also the maximum loss with the maximum possible gain being $378. The maximum gain would occur if BMY stock fell below $35 on the expiration date.

The Barchart Technical Opinion rating is a 100% Sell with a Strongest short term outlook on maintaining the current direction.

Long term indicators fully support a continuation of the trend.

Of the 22 Analysts following BMY there are 4 Strong Buy, 1 Moderate Buy, 16 Hold and 1 Strong Sell recommendations.

Mitigating Risk

Thankfully, bear put spreads are risk defined trades, so they have some build in risk management. The most the INTC example can lose is $213 while the CLF example can lose $144 and the BMY trade has risk of $222.

For each trade consider setting a stop loss of 30% of the max loss.

Please remember that options are risky, and investors can lose 100% of their investment. This article is for education purposes only and not a trade recommendation. Remember to always do your own due diligence and consult your financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

On the date of publication, Gavin McMaster did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here.
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