Ratio Back Spread
Sell one option and buy two further OTM options for unlimited profit potential.
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What Is a Ratio Back Spread?
A ratio back spread is a two-to-one (or similar ratio) options position where you sell one option closer to the money and buy two or more options further out of the money, typically in the same expiration. The position is usually structured to collect a small credit or cost nothing to enter. If the stock makes a large move in the direction of the long options, you profit substantially — because you own more options than you are short, there is unlimited (or very large) profit potential on the side of the long options. The danger zone is a moderate move to the short option's strike at expiration — there, you are exposed to a limited but real loss. Ratio back spreads are used when you expect a binary event with a potentially large move, but the direction is uncertain or the premium makes a straight long straddle too expensive.
When to Use a Ratio Back Spread
Use a ratio back spread before major catalysts where you expect a large directional move: earnings announcements, FDA decisions, product launches, or macro events. The trade is most attractive when you can enter for a credit (or zero cost) — then your worst case is losing the spread width at the short strike, while your best case is capturing a large move in the direction of your long options. Call ratio back spreads suit a bullish explosive-move thesis; put ratio back spreads suit a bearish explosive-move thesis. Avoid this strategy when the expected move is moderate — the loss zone at the short strike is real and can result in a loss even when the stock moves in your general direction.
Trade Structure
Sell 1 option closer to the money (ATM or slightly ITM) and buy 2 options further OTM in the same expiration. For a call ratio back spread: sell 1 ATM call, buy 2 OTM calls at a higher strike. For a put ratio back spread: sell 1 ATM put, buy 2 OTM puts at a lower strike. The ratio can also be 1:3 for even more leveraged exposure to a large move.
Max Profit
For a call ratio back spread: unlimited as the stock rises well above the long call strikes. For a put ratio back spread: very large (stock approaches zero) as the stock falls far below the long put strikes. The profit accelerates because you own two long options for every one short option — once the stock moves through the long strikes, you have net long options exposure with no cap.
Max Loss
The maximum loss occurs at the short strike at expiration. For a call back spread: (short call strike − long call strike) × 100 minus any credit received. This loss is limited — the position is not a catastrophic one — but it can feel counterintuitive to lose money on a position when the stock moved in your general direction (but not far enough).
Breakeven
Two breakevens define the profit/loss zones. Below the short strike (for a call back spread): you keep the credit (or it is zero cost). Between the short strike and the lower long strike: losses build to the maximum at the short strike. Above the upper breakeven (where the two long calls' value exceeds the loss from the short): profitable territory that expands as the stock rises further.
Greeks Profile
Vega is net positive — you own more options than you are short, so a rise in implied volatility (which often precedes a large stock move) increases the position's value. This is one reason ratio back spreads can be entered before high-IV events. Delta is in the direction of the long options (positive for calls, negative for puts) but is initially small — it grows rapidly once the stock moves past the long strikes. Gamma is strongly positive past the long option strikes, meaning the delta accelerates dramatically in a large move. Theta is negative — you are net long options, so time decay costs you if the stock doesn't move.
Ratio Back Spread Trading Tips
- Try to enter the ratio back spread for a credit or zero cost — the trade is then essentially free if the stock fails to make a large move.
- The dangerous zone is between the short and long strikes at expiration — this is where you lose money despite the stock moving in your general direction.
- Exit the position before expiration if the stock makes the large move you anticipated — do not hold for pinpoint maximum profit.
- Use ratio back spreads on liquid, high-volume options with tight bid-ask spreads to avoid slippage on the 3-leg execution.
- Set a clear stop: if the stock is sitting near the short strike two weeks before expiration, close or adjust the position to avoid maximum loss.
- Call ratio back spreads are ideal for pre-earnings plays on technology stocks with a history of large post-earnings moves.
- The 1:3 ratio (sell 1, buy 3) amplifies both profit potential and the loss at the short strike — use only when you have very high conviction in a large directional move.
- Monitor vega carefully: if IV collapses before the expected move occurs (unusual but possible), the long options will lose value faster than anticipated.