10 Options Strategies for 2026 (From Low Risk to Aggressive)
Video Description
Choosing an options strategy is often harder than learning one. This video is designed to help you compare ten different options trading strategies, not just study them in isolation. In this video, I walk through 10 options strategies to consider for 2026, based on interviews with real retail options traders who actively trade these setups. Instead of focusing on a single strategy, the goal is to give you context — so you can see how different options strategies compare and where each one fits on the risk spectrum. You’ll see strategies covering: - Aggressive 0DTE and day trading options strategies - Medium-term options strategies with a 1–2 week horizon - Longer-term, lower-risk and more structured options trades Each strategy is introduced and summarized by me, and then illustrated with excerpts from the trader who uses it. If a strategy resonates with you, you’ll find a link to the full, in-depth options trading interview for that strategy in the description. This is not a “best options strategies” or hype-driven list. It’s a practical overview of different options trading approaches, designed to help you think more clearly about: - Risk vs reward - Time commitment - Trade management - Which options strategies actually fit your trading style Whether you trade 0DTE options, weekly options, or longer-term options strategies, this video gives you a big-picture framework for options trading in 2026 — and helps you decide which strategies are worth exploring further. Find a text summary on Theta Profits: https://www.thetaprofits.com/10-options-strategies-to-consider-for-2026/?utm_source=YouTube&utm_medium=YouTube&utm_campaign=YouTube FIND THE FULL INTERVIEWS ABOUT THE 10 STRATEGIES HERE - Strategy 1: Multiple Entries Iron Condors - with Tammy Chambless https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-CmLEeiaoU - Strategy 2: 0DTE Iron Fly - with Doc Severson https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ad27qIuhgQ4 - Strategy 3: 0DTE Levitation Trades - with Boomer Dan https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DHViE1YZ710 - Strategy 4: Time Flies & Flyagonal - with Simon Black https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nzx4yWbzs-I and Steve Ganz https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_7vCLAcc9c - Strategy 5: Rolling Put Diagonal - with Bill Belt https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DQWW_zCFUk - Strategy 6: Double Calendar - with Ravish Ahuja https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=olVPaP7OSOM - Strategy 7: The Wheel - with Paul Gundersen https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YtRZoni93Jg - Strategy 8: 21 DTE Put Broken Wing Butterfly - with Carl Allen https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ea0DwpJtgg - Strategy 9: Selling far out of the money puts - with Lee Lowell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfPyEz5g-TE - Strategy 10: No loss trades - with Christian Czirnich https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJfvBfaeuP4 RECOMMENDED TOOLS FOR OPTIONS TRADERS (affiliate links) 📉 EARNINGS WATCHER is a fantastic tool for options trading around earnings releases. 33% OFF on their annual plan with this link: https://earnings-watcher.com/pricing_... 🛠️ OPTIONSTRAT is a great tool to plan, analyze, and visualize your trades. ☀️ 20% OFF during the first month with this link: https://optionstrat.com/thetaprofits 🗓️ BACKTEST YOUR STRATEGIES! Option Omega is a popular and reliable tool for backtesting. GET 50% OFF THE FIRST YEAR with this link: https://optionomega.com/register/thet... 🚀 OPTION SAMURAI - find the best options opportunities in the market: https://optionsamurai.com/?fpr=uaojo1 ------------- 📥 SIGN UP to Theta Profits newsletter to get notified when I publish new videos: http://eepurl.com/i5CJ5A 02:53 Strategy 1: Multiple Entries Iron Condors - with Tammy Chambless 05:54 Strategy 2: 0DTE Iron Fly - with Doc Severson 10:09 Strategy 3: 0DTE Levitation Trades - with Boomer Dan 13:54 Strategy 4: Time Flies & Flyagonal - with Simon Black and Steve Ganz 18:03 Strategy 5: Rolling Put Diagonal - with Bill Belt 22:45 Strategy 6: Double Calendar - with Ravish Ahuja 28:55 Strategy 7: The Wheel - with Paul Gundersen 32:17 Strategy 8: 21 DTE Put Broken Wing Butterfly - with Carl Allen 36:49 Strategy 9: Selling far out of the money puts - with Lee Lowell 39:58 Strategy 10: No loss trades - with Christian Czirnich
Transcript
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So my goal for the year is 100% return. >> The risk of ours is very low. My goal is to get in, get my fair share, and to get out. >> I can just close the laptop and walk away knowing that no matter what, uh, the trade is going to be a winner.
>> And now I'm safe. >> It is not unreasonable to get between 15 and 30% a month. >> If I were to just trade double calendar in an account, I can make well over 100% annually. The wheel strategy has produced very consistent income for me.
>> It's a very high probability trade, so it wins about 80% of the time. >> One of the best things about zero DTE options is no overnight risk. >> One of the most common questions I get is which options trading strategies
makes most sense right now? Throughout 2025, I've interviewed a wide range of experienced retail options traders and options experts here on Theta Profits.
In those conversations, we have covered dozens of strategies, some conservative, some more aggressive, all focused on one goal, using options in a smart, repeatable way. I put
together 10 great options strategies to consider for 2026. All of them have been covered in full here on Theta Profits. I'll briefly summarize the strategy, explain why it might make sense in 2026,
and then let you hear directly from the guest with key excerpts from the original conversation. If any strategy resonates with you, you'll find a link in the description to the full interview where we go much deeper into the details, the risks, and how the guest
actually trades it. I have structured this video into three main segments based on time horizon. First, we will look at three zero DTE or day trading strategies. Then we'll move into three and mediumterm strategies
typically held for one or two weeks. And finally, we'll finish with four long-term strategies designed to be held for weeks or months. We'll start with the most active part of the spectrum, zero DTE and day trading strategies.
These trades are opened and closed on the same day, typically on S&P with clearly defined risk and no overnight exposure. Zero DT trading isn't for everyone. But for traders who can focus during the
trading day and know how to manage the risk, these strategies can be very powerful. The first strategy I want to highlight is MEIC, multiple entries and iron condors. This is a zero DTE SPX
strategy where you enter multiple small iron condors throughout the day instead of one large position. Each side is managed independently using very tight stop- losses. And the key feature of the strategy is that if
only one side is stopped out, the trade often ends up near break even instead of a full loss. This approach was presented by Tammy Chambles who has traded and refined MEIC live for years and I might
say that my own breadandut strategy zero DTE break even condor is very close to MEIC. So I'm going to talk about multiple entry iron condors and I have my goal for trading options no matter what strategy is a good annual return
and low drawd downs. I just don't like the psychological effect of of high draw down. So I really aim for low draw downs. And the MEIC rules that I use are legging into an iron condor uh multiple
times a day using zero DTE options on S&P. Uh I enter six trades each day at about 30 to 60 minutes apart generally in the late morning through afternoon. My credit targets lately I've reduced them because of the lower volatility
generally from one to a dollar to $1.75 credit on each side. You can use other credits uh if you want, but the the higher the credit, the larger the draw downs that I've found in my experience.
And then I use uh from 50 wide to to anywhere from 50 to 60 wide on average to all the way up to 100 wide uh because I want to pay as little as possible for that long leg. You can use any width of
spread that works for you. you know, back test it to make sure it's going to work the way you think it's going to work. Then I set a stop for a oneex net lost, which which is two times the initial credit. And I set that stop on
each side separately. I don't set it on the whole iron condor. So management, I enter and manage each side separately, and I leave all trades on until either they hit the stop or expire worthless. And because MEIC has a clear set of
rules, it can be easily automated. >> MEIC is a good example of a zero DTE strategy that prioritizes structure, consistency, and draw down control over excitement.
If you want the full breakdown of rules, automation, and back testing, you'll find a link to the complete interview with Tammy in the description. The second strategy is stock's zero DTE iron fly.
This is a same day S&P trade where the short call and the short put are placed at the same strike near the current market price with defined risk wings based on the expected move. The trade is
usually entered around 30 minutes after the market opens and is designed to be closed very quickly. typically within 15 to 30 minutes. >> That to me was almost like the holy grail of zero DTE trades. My average
whole time is about 18 minutes. John, my goal is to get in, get my fair share, and to get out because to me, time is money. An ironfly is an iron condor. So, I think most of your listeners are aware
of what an iron condor is. You have a put credit spread married to a call credit spread. >> And to be clear, an ironfly is basically an iron condor where the two shorts are on the same strike. Correct.
>> Strike. Yeah. The put, the short put and call are at the same strike price. Bringing them in actually is sort of counterintuitive. Bringing in the wings, so you're making the trade more narrow is counterintuitive to most people.
Their first question is, well, you know, doc, why would you make the trade more narrow? Doesn't that it makes no sense to me? Well, it's it's really good from a couple of of perspectives here. So number one, by making the trade more narrow, reducing your profitability
range does one very very wonderful thing, which is to speed up the trade significantly. So versus a a wide wide iron condor where you have to wait the majority of the day to realize your very
small profits by putting them closer in you get much bigger credits and the time decay is much much faster. So that's one of the big advantages is speed of the trade, which is something that's very
important to me now because I don't want to be spending all day long staring at a screen, you know, wondering how a trade is working out. The second thing that's a real big advantage is just the reward to risk on the trade. When you have wide high probability iron condors, your
reward to risk is usually very poor. Your probabilities are high, but your reward to risk is very poor. So it then falls upon you to be very very disciplined with your stop- losses as everything is right. But by bringing in
the trade, by making it more narrow, you significantly improve your reward to risk and you make it a much more manageable trade such that if you were not able to watch the market or didn't have to watch the market all day long,
that is a a possibility that you could pursue. Now let's move into what happens when the trade goes against you because this is a fastmoving uh trade both when it comes to taking profit but I guess also when it comes to getting into negative territory if the market doesn't
move your way. What are your exact rules for taking the loss or and putting up stop-loss? >> I've got a spreadsheet that basically tells me what to do. Right. So what I'll do is I'll I'll enter the expected moves
into that. So an expected move figure and then I'll enter the entry point of that. So say it's 6850 and the example for today that we had with a 29 point expected move. My stop
losses would be at 68.21 21 and 6879. And so if the price comes down to there, boom, I'm out. >> The ironfly is all about speed and discipline. It replaces prediction with
execution. The full interview with Doc is linked below. The third zero DTE strategy is Boomerang's levitation strategy. This approach typically starts with an at the money credit spreads and is
actively managed intraday with the goal of moving the entire position above the zero line on the risk graph making it effectively risk-free. The same process can be repeated multiple times throughout the day. The whole goal behind this trade is to
create a zero DTE trade. It could be used with other option expiration lengths as well like one day out, week, month, whatever. But I'm using the zero DTE trade. So my goal is to take a zero DTE trade on the S&P and maneuver it,
manage it in such a way to get to make the trade completely risk-free as quickly as possible. >> I'm really curious how you how you do that because this must be a dream situation to be in at the end at the end of the day. Yeah, once you once you get
it in, it is a dream. However, it's important to realize that you don't start off you start off with some risk, but with these trades and everything else I've found, there is going to be some initial risk at the beginning, but the goal is to eliminate that risk as quickly as possible and get the whole thing floating up above the zero line on
the risk graph. Now, the way that I put these on is I I start with an at the money credit spread. I sell an at the money credit spread, and this is on the S&P. It's important to to know that you need to these trades won't necessarily work on anything other than cash settled
indexes or you could but you have to get out of them at the end of the day. The easiest ways to use cash settled indexes so you don't have to worry about assignment and you know having to make sure your trades are off at the end of the day. You can let these just go into the night. So it's at the money and the pricing on this is 255
which is usually what you'll get. Sometimes you'll you have to kind of fudge and go up a little bit or outside the tent a little bit to make that work. I want to try to get 250 or better. So, it's a 1:1 riskreward ratio. I'm going to go ahead and go forward by 20 minutes. And you can see we've moved into the tent. This trade is up 130
140ish bucks. And so, what I'm going to do now is I'm just going to complete the other side of this. I'm going to turn this into a butterfly. So, I'm going to So, I'm going to buy a debit spread with the short at the exact same spot there, and it turns it into a floating butterfly.
>> And now, this butterfly uh will always make money. And this happens because you were already moved the the put credit spread into the profit. So, you use this profit, you lock in some profit. Is that correctly understood? >> Yes, that's exactly correct. I think the
strategy is probably for an intermediate options trader who understands credit spreads and butterflies. Uh as long as they understand the mechanics and how to put on a credit spread and they understand that they need some sort of a hedge if they want to hedge it and
they're somewhat nimble with being with uh actually making the trades on their platform. I mean, it's not going to be like a fire alarm. You have time with this. It's not super stressful, but you should have the ability to uh be comfortable opening and closing trades. So, I'd say an inter intermediate
options trader. >> Limitation is very hands-on and very different from most zero DT strategies. The full interview with Boomeran is of course linked below. Those were the three very active zero
DTE strategies. Now, let's slow things down. The next three strategies move into a mediumterm horizon typically held for one to two weeks requiring fewer inday decisions.
The first strategy is actually two very similar strategies time flies and flyagonal. They were presented by Simon Black and Steve Gans. Both combine a put diagonal below the
market and a cold broken win butterfly above the market designed to benefit from time decay and volatility behavior. In short, the put diagonal will benefit from increased volatility which typically happens when the market drops.
The cold broken wing butterfly will benefit from decreasing volatility which typically happens when the market grinds upwards. They also have about the same time frame about 10 days. Where they differ a bit are on the mechanics that two traders
use. >> If we go up and volatility drops, the butterfly is making money for me. If the market goes down and volatility increases, the diagonal is making money for me. >> So, this strategy is my attempt to try to make the most of theta decay while
staying delta neutral like a lot of traders like to do. Um but at the same time uh hopefully manage volatility contraction and and expansion you know and trying to make them basically trying to cover all our bases with the market
uh moves and these trades I try to do are weekly trades trying to be delta neutral theta positive Vega positive I called it a time fly spread couple bit of a play on words there because obviously theta decay is all about time flying by but also um there's a there's
a sort of a calendar you diagonal component which is a time sort of trade and there's also a butterfly component. I'm trying to combine a put diagonal below the market price and a call broken wing butterfly above the
price. So you sort of have to understand diagonals or calendars which are very similar trades and butterflies and that's the two components to understand. As we know um volatility and market drops sort of go hand in hand, right? when when some big news is announced and
the market dumps 5%. V spikes, you you hardly ever see the market dump and the V go down, right? It's sort of that correlation, right? The markets don't crash up, right? They they crash down. So, what would happen if the market did make a big 3% move, what happens is
volatility spikes. So, what you'll see if if I start sliding the V slider up, you'll see that the overall temp gets wider, right? So it's almost like this buffer where you're playing for a downsized move, but when you get a down size move, the tent gets wider. So even
even if it moves further than you thought, it's you know what it's it's compensating for that. >> The 42nd version is that I have developed trading classes in both butterflies and diagonals. And as I was doing that, I realized that they each
have weaknesses. But if I combine the two together, it gets rid of a lot of the weaknesses. So I put those two together in a strategy I call the flag. Expirations, I'm normally going about 8 to 10 days is where I'm
normally at. The short strike is 8 to 10 days out. The long strike, I usually go about double whatever the short strike is. So if my short strike is 8 to 10 days out, my long strike is going to be 16 to 20. The average holding time is
about 4 and a half days. I'm shooting for 10%. But I also have a general rule about when I have to adjust a trade. I lower my expectations. Strategy is certainly best suited for somebody that has made options trades before. This is
not something that a beginner is going to come in and they haven't even done an iron condor yet and they step into this. Not not where they should be starting. Whether it's called time flies or fly, the idea is the same structural balance.
Both full interviews are of course linked in the description. The fifth strategy is the rolling put diagonal, a medium-term income strategy that sits right between short-term trading and long-term trading. At its core, this strategy is about
consistently selling shortdated puts for income while using a longerdated put as protection and to manage the buying power. Instead of closing the position after one cycle, the short put is rolled again and again or follow allowing time
decay and small directional moves to do most of the work. This strategy was presented by Bill Belt, who has refined the rolling put diagonal into a very rules-based repeatable income approach with a strong focus on capital
efficiency and risk management. Let's start with how Bill explains what the rolling put diagonal actually is. Yeah, the the rolling put diagonal has been a very successful strategy for me because it combines flexibility with
options and and what I believe is a pretty high rate of return or yield on on the margin or buying power that I'm using. Some people call this a short put
diagonal. Some people call it a credit diagonal. But at the end of the day, it's basically a spread that is a hybrid between a calendar spread and a vertical spread. So, as a result, you have two
legs. One leg being your income leg and your long leg which is further out of the money in the put side being your protection or being your buying power
management. The goal is income. what I am doing basically probably about 15 to 35 or 40% per month of return on investment
using the amount of buying power that you're using in the months. >> Let's then think that you are opening a new diagonal today. Okay. What what are the mechanics you will follow? Well, what I'm going to do basically is I'm
going to sell to open tomorrow's at the money strike price with tomorrow's expiration. >> And then I may look at 14 days to expiration or maybe 30 days to
expiration. Um, and I want to go to about a 30 to 35 delta. The rolling put diagonal is an income strategy that utilizes delta management.
What I want to do is to make sure that my short has a higher delta and the long has a lower delta. So as the depreciation goes into my pocket, I'm getting I'm
getting the income from the short leg. So, I may sell the current one for let's say a dollar and a half or $2 and I may buy the current one back at let's say a quarter or 50 cents. So, that
in between there is my profit >> and every day I will roll. So, and I will roll to either at the money or if the price has gone down I roll do a horizontal roll. What is the worst that
can happen with this strategy? >> The worst that can happen is the difference between the short and the the long. So you basically are taking the spread and saying my maximum loss could
be x amount if the market is correct. In other words, you're not trying to force a square peg into a round hole. Um, so if you doing it in a flat to a slightly bullish market, it's a lowrisk strategy.
If you are trying to put it into a declining market, it's a high risk because you're banking on the market turning around. So the first thing is make sure your environment is the right environment. >> This is a processdriven strategy. The
full interview with Bill is linked below. The sixth strategy and the final one in our midterms section is the double calendar. This is a rangebased volatility aware strategy typically held
for one to two weeks where you place a put calendar below the market and a call calendar above the market. The result is a wide profit zone with defined risk driven by time decay and changes in
implied volatility. Compared to iron counters, the double calendar relies less on price precision and more on volatility behavior and it can actually benefit if volatility increases after
entry. This approach was uh presented by Ravish Auya who treats the double calendar as a campaign style trade with clear rules around entries and exits. Let's start with how Ravish explains the core idea behind the strategy. So double
calendar is a rangebased strategy. It is like an iron condor, but with double calendar, we use different dates for both strikes. And that allows us to have a much wider range compared to an iron condor. And on top of that, with an iron
condor, you are typically risking like $80 to make $20 profit. But with double calendar, you can make well over 100% even in best case scenario. And your risk is smaller, but the payout is much bigger. There are two types of calendar.
First one is a call calendar in which basically we will have two calls but both of them are going to be for different dates. So for example I can sell one call I can buy one call for 27th of June and sell one call for 20th
June. Let's start with an example of a single calendar on the at the money strike. It will give us a profit and loss curve kind of like this which resembles a butterfly. But the main difference between butterfly and
calendar is that butterfly makes profit when VIX goes down. Calendar makes profit when VIX goes up. And you can position these strikes at anywhere. So you can use calendar in three different ways. You can use it for a neutral trade. You can use it for a bullish
trade. You can also use it for a bearish trade. Now in a double calendar we like to combine both call calendar and a put calendar. In this case I am going to do a 5900 put calendar and I'm going to do
a 6100 strike call calendar. So now I have my strikes placed about approximately 100 point away from the current price. Now this gives me a 71% chance of profit and it gives me a very
wide break even curve where if S&P goes up or down by 2.4% in these 10 days I will make some profit. Now in this case I will not be making like 200% 300% profit because what's going to happen is
if S&P goes up the call calendar is going to make profit and the put calendar might end up at a break even or a small loss. If SPX goes down then put calendar is going to make a bigger profit and call calendar is going to be
at a smaller loss. >> How will the profit loss curve look look then? So profit and loss curve will look down. So let's say we start here today. If even if S&P stays flat day over day we are accumulating theta and the max
profit is going to be somewhere in between the both strikes but initially if you are through the trade like halfway through the trade the the curve is still going to be very smooth. The further you go near the
expiry, you will see that a sag starts to develop in the middle and the max profit range shifts to each strike. So by the end of expiry, you will make max profit if it ends up near the call
strike or the put strike and you will make smaller profit in the middle. So which is why I like to exit a few days before expiry while the curve is still smooth. So at this point anywhere between the expiry dates I can make some
profit. So one big risk for double calendar strategy is that if VIX comes down then this trade is going to lose. So let's simulate that in in this profit and loss curve. So now here we see that
we have a very wide range of profit. But if VIX comes down then we see that in the middle of the range it will become a sea of red. So I am going to lose money if the trade is in middle of both strikes. And in that case the only way
to make money is going to be if S&P lands very close to one of the strike prices. But if VIX goes up then you see that my profit range expands very wide. It goes very wide and I can make profit like anywhere. Even if it goes past my
strike, I can still make profit if VIX goes up. The rule of thumb is that you want to enter when VIX is low and take profit when VIX is high. So, this strategy is ideal for someone who wants to amplify their returns, but they don't
want to day trade, spend all day doing technical analysis, watching charts. If you want something with a reasonable riskreward where you have high win rate, smaller losses, bigger wins, it's very consistent, it's ideal for someone like
that. The double calendar is ideal for traders who understand volatility and want flexibility. Now, we move to the final section, long-term strategies designed to be held for weeks or months.
We'll start the long-term section with one of the most well-known options income strategies, the wheel. At its core, the wheel alternates between selling cash secured puts to enter the stock positions and selling covered
calls once shares are assigned with a goal of generating steady income over time. Trades are typically held for weeks or months, and the strategy works best for traders who are comfortable owning
quality stocks. This version of the wheel was presented by Paul Gunderson, who emphasizes treating it as a process driven long-term income strategy rather than a way to chase premium or short-term gains. The wheel is
especially well suited for traders who want a slower pace, limited screen time, and a strategy that can be run consistently along a normal life. Let's start with how Paul explains the wheel at the high level. My version of the
wheel is simple. I follow the process, which is essentially three steps. research. There is uh to determine what stocks I'd like to own and then there's a process called the cash secured put at the top of the wheel, a covered call at
the bottom of the wheel. You'll learn about this as we go. And then the only other thing I'd say is I like what I call sci-fi trades. set it and for and my version of sci-fi is that I will spend about 15 minutes in the morning you know after the market opens and then
about 15 minutes in the afternoon adjusting my trades making new trades and that's it for me at a high level the wheel strategy has produced very consistent income for me which is important to many people that that they need that consistent income I'd say in
general 12 to 15% from the wheel per year and then an additional 3% in dividend income generally. So I'm getting between 15 and 18%. >> I always ask my guests what is the worst that can happen with this strategy?
>> Well, I think the worst is that uh at the top of the wheel where we're selling the cash secured but we don't own the stock yet is you can be assigned a stock that is well below your strike price. If your strike price is 100, you could be
assigned at 80 or 70 or 20 dollars a share. So, uh that has happened to me, but you still end up owning the stock at the end of the road. And then you know that they they do recover many of them
over time. In a few words, the wheel strategy lets you get paid while you wait. So, if I'm waiting to buy a stock, I get paid and then I get paid again while I'm holding the stock. It's a it's
a very steady it's a very repeatable process and it puts you in great great control over your assets. To me, I would say it's suited for busy people. It's suited for sci-fi, set it and forget it
people who are busy who but they want to bring in income and they don't have a lot of time. >> And of course, a link to the full interview with Paul can be found in the description. The next strategy is the 21DTE put broken wing butterfly. This is
a longerdated defined risk strategy typically entered about 3 weeks to expiration and most often traded on index products like S&P. The structure is designed to have no risk to the upside, limited and predefined risk to
the downside and a high probability of success in neutral to moderately bullish markets. What makes this setup especially attractive is that it allows traders to sell premium with structure without needing con adjustments or
intraday management. This approach was presented by Carl Allen who focuses on keeping the strategy simple, rule-based and repeatable. Let's start with how Carl explains the core idea behind the 21 DTE broken wing butterfly. The broken
wing butterfly put strategy is a bullish strategy. It's a very high probability trade, so it wins about 80% of the time. It's a defined risk strategy, so you don't have to worry about naked option risks. There's several different ways to
manage it when it wins. There's a few different ways you can manage it if it loses. And it just it's a very easy to set up and execute and just let it run and then close out for a profit. Let's
let's start with a butterfly. People a lot of times think about butterflies as there's iron butterflies or iron flies and then there's also put butterflies. But either way, the idea is you sell two options at the same strike and then you
buy two options outside of those two. Typically, in mo when most people trade butterflies, they're selling two two strikes in the middle and then they're buying two equally distant puts away from it to use as hedges to protect the
them from the the two shorts they're selling. The the issue with that is the only way you profit is if you stay in between the two long puts that you've bought. And so you you're shooting for a pretty narrow window. And your goal is
to hit right between those as close to those two short puts as you can. The broken wing butterfly changes that by selling or buying one of your puts much further away than the other one is. And so when you do that,
you eliminate all the risk to one side. And so it's a broken wing butterfly because the the way that if you look at the at a butterfly profit diagram, it it looks like a big triangle. And if you use your imagination, you can think of it like a
butterfly. Um when you break the wing, now the one side is way lower than the other and it now it's a broken wing butterfly. So the little lines out, they're not even anymore. They're broken. I've chosen 21 days and I've chosen to set it up where
the strikes are well out of the money. And this came after lots and lots of trial and error, different kinds of strike choices and different expiration choices. The first thing I do is I turn around and set a close order for, in this case, if it's a 25 point wide one,
I'd set a close order for 50 cents. Good until cancel. For the most part, I just kind of set it and forget about it. It also might be a good time to think about setting up a bracket order and make it sell at 50 cents and then maybe set a stop loss to close it at maybe two times
more than what you collected to start with. If you want to manage it that way, that's probably a good time to go ahead and bracket it so that you're either going to win or you're going to lose. And if you get to all the way to seven days and you haven't won or lost, then it's probably time to take action at
that point, too. So, I think this works well for people that want to do put a portion of their portfolio into something that's a little more aggressive. And it also I think, you know, I've over time become a little more choiceful about when I decide to do
this. So, I I'll do this a lot of times if I don't have any of these on, I'll put them on on a down day when the market's already gone down a little bit. >> That was Carl Allen. You find the link to the full interview with him in the description. The next strategy takes a
very conservative approach to long-term options income, selling far out of the money puts. This is a longerterm strategy typically using expirations from 1 to 3 months where the focus is not on collecting large premiums but on
creating a wide margin for error by selling puts far below the current stock price. The goal is consistency and capital preservation rather than aggressive returns. and the strategy works best on high
quality stocks that the trader would be comfortable owning if assigned. This approach was presented by Lee Lavel who has built his entire trading philosophy around conservative put selling and risk first decisionmaking.
Let's start with how Lee explains why he prefers selling puts this way. Well, number one, we love selling put options. In my opinion, I think it's probably the greatest option trading strategy ever. But the way that we do it, the way I teach people to sell put options in very conservative manner, we use very deep
out of the money strike prices. Stocks here, we're selling put options way down here. And that's a good way for beginner put option sellers to dip a toe into the strategy. So we're very conservative. We sell deep out of the money strikes. And you get smaller premiums for that, but
it's done for a reason because we want to have a lot of cushion for directional error. You know, a lot of people are not very good at picking stock direction. So if you can give yourself a lot of cushion for directional error, selling out of the money conservative put options can work very well for the beginning trader. And once they understand the strategy a little better,
once they get a little bit better at reading chart direction, then they can up their game and get a little bit more risky with the strikes that they choose. You know, when you sell a put option, you're really obligating yourself to potentially buy a stock at a certain price. And you get to choose that strike or that price of that stock. So you're
really in control as a put option seller. You're getting to choose the stock that you want to trade. You're getting to choose the potential level where you get to buy that stock. And someone's going to pay you money up front for that obligation. I think it's a win-win for everybody. Our criteria is the stock price is here. We're going at
least 20% below that stock price for the strike price. So, we've got a 20% directional buffer. We're looking anywhere from one to three months out in time as long as that fits within that earnings that non-earnings period. And we try to use the, you know, we're
looking for small premiums or what someone would consider smaller 25 to 30 cents per contract. That's actually 25 $30 that you'd get in your pocket in a one month to three-month time frame. We typically can close the trade out in about 60 days. And so we use the
shortest expiration we can find where we can get at least 25 to 30 cents per contract and have a 20% buffer. The chance of assignment is extremely low. The strikes that we pick have roughly about a 95% probability stock's not going to fall that far. The option
decays theta as you know and then we buy the option back a lot cheaper and then our money gets released. We move on to the next trade. And yes, also the full interview with Lee is linked below. The final entry in this video is not a single strategy but a framework for
structuring trades so that they have no loss at expiration. These trades can experience draw downs while they're open. But if held to expiration, the outcome is fixed, meaning there is no risk of loss at expiration regardless of
where the market ends up. This approach is built around options pricing relationships, interest rates, and synthetic positions, and is typically applied to longer trades held for several weeks or months. This framework
was presented by Kavistian Sherich and it represents a very different way of thinking about risk. One that prioritizes capital preservation over short-term gains. I place this kind of trade
and I say okay I switch off my computer and I will look at this tomorrow again. Fine. I know I'm safe. But it is possible to set up a no loss trade at
expiration where there is absolutely no risk to the downside. >> That's correct, John. Uh you can set up a spy trade which will show you no loss at expiration. It may have draw downs during the trade but at expiration. This
trade you see just now on the screen has no loss at expiration. The moment you you do a debit trade, you get paid the fed funds rate. And if you do a credit trade nowadays, you pay
the fed funds rate. If the interest you earn on your debit during the time you hold the trade is enough or higher than the loss zone of your trade you're actually placing, then you have a no risk or no loss trade at hand. simply
because the interest rate you receive over time lifts your trade out of the loss zone. We have here Microsoft. Microsoft is trading at 357.86 and I see Microsoft going back to the
400 420 area within the next 120 days, 130 days. This is an August trade. I don't know if Microsoft is paying a dividend within this time. If Microsoft has an X dividend date during that time,
we will also receive dividend because we are long stock. So that would be added to the $96 we have as a guaranteed profit in this trade. But why I'm looking at this or
what's interesting, how is this trade developing? You enter this trade today and we have no profit in the trade. Now this trade is developing if the implied volatility stays as it is
like this. The moment the market goes up you will see a profit in the trade. Of course if you are simply long stock you would see more profit. On the other hand, if the market crashes further because we have some new tariffs to deal
with, this trade will have a marginal loss of 100, 200, maybe $300 per combo if IV goes up as well. But overall, this T0 line is very,
very flat. So, it will do you no harm if the market crashes. On the other hand, if the market goes up, your trade goes up. Maybe not as fast and not as nice as if you had a simple long stock position,
but you are protected. The thing is, you can only go broke if you lose money. You can't go broke if you lose time. Of course, a time is money. I don't expect every trade I do to end outside
of the wings. Still, some of my trades will end outside of the wings because I've read the market wrong. It happens. But then I at least receive 1% or 2% on the invested capital instead of having a
loss. I'm 60 years old. I don't need huge returns within a day. Of course, I like huge returns within a day. Who wouldn't? But I know I will not have it. I cannot do that every day, every day, every day. It's not possible. I like a
consistency and I'm very happy to have a 20% or 25% return per year. You find the link to the full interview with Christian in the description. Those are 10 great option strategies or frameworks
to consider for 2026. Of course, this is not financial advice. Do your own research. Trade at your own risk. From zero DD trading to long-term capital approaches, the common theme is
structure, discipline, and define risk. All full interviews are linked in the description.
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