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Back to strategy library Bearish

Bear Put Spread

The disciplined bearish trade. Buy a higher-strike put, sell a lower-strike put, and cap both your cost and your downside profit at a known level.

MAX PROFITWidth − debit
MAX LOSSNet debit paid
BREAK-EVENLong strike − debit
OUTLOOKModerately bearish
Short 22,300 PE Long 22,500 PE BE 22,420 P&L Spot → Max profit Max loss

The thesis

The Bear Put Spread is the structural twin of the bull call spread, flipped for a downside view. You buy a put near the current level and sell a further-OTM put below, which subsidises your long and caps the maximum win at the lower strike.

Shorting the index through futures is capital-intensive and carries unlimited upside risk; naked long puts bleed theta and require a fast move. The bear put spread sits between the two — moderate leverage, capped risk, capped reward, a far gentler theta burn than a single long put.

Use it when you expect a controlled decline: a weakening trend, a post-rally exhaustion, or a bearish macro tilt. Don't use it if you're expecting a crash — in that case, a naked put or put ratio captures more of the tail.

Construction

Two puts, same expiry, different strikes. The long strike is ATM or slightly OTM; the short strike is the level you think spot might reach by expiry.

ActionInstrumentStrikePremium (est.)
BuyNifty Put22,500 PE130
SellNifty Put22,300 PE50
Net debit80 (= ₹6,000 per lot of 75)

When it works

When it fails

Greeks at entry

DELTANegativeNet short direction
THETASmall negativeSoftened by short leg
VEGASmall positiveResidual long-vega
GAMMASmall positiveConcentrated at long strike

Like its bullish twin, the bear put spread has a clean, teachable Greeks profile — a good first real-money structure for new options traders who have done their paper work.

Example trade (educational only)

Nifty spot at 22,500, monthly expiry 20 days out. You buy the 22,500 PE at ₹130 and sell the 22,300 PE at ₹50. Net debit = ₹80 × 75 = ₹6,000 per lot.

Max profit = width (200) − debit (80) = 120 × 75 = ₹9,000. Break-even at expiry = 22,500 − 80 = 22,420.

Adjustments & exits

Who should study this

Swing traders who want bearish exposure without the capital drag of futures, and anyone graduating from naked long puts who has learned how expensive theta can be. The bear put spread teaches defined risk, trade discipline, and the value of giving up unlimited upside for a cleaner Greeks profile.

Unsure what fits your style? Take the Trader Quiz.

Practice this on paper before real capital.

Bearish trades feel intuitive on a red-candle day and disastrous when the market ignores your thesis for two weeks. Paper-trade at least ten cycles.

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