Bull Call Ladder
Also known as: Long Call Ladder
Moderately bullish — expecting the stock to rise to a specific range (between B and C) but not dramatically higher; willing to accept unlimited risk above C for lower cost entry
Risk Profile at a Glance
How to Construct the Bull Call Ladder
- 1.Buy 1 call at strike A
- 2.Sell 1 call at strike B
- 3.Sell 1 call at strike C (C > B > A)
- 4.Same expiration
- 5.Net debit or small credit depending on strikes
Understanding the Bull Call Ladder
The bull call ladder extends the bull call spread by adding a third sold call at a higher strike. The extra short call further reduces the cost of the trade (or can generate a credit) but creates unlimited risk above the highest strike. Maximum profit is achieved when the stock is between strikes B and C at expiration. Below strike A, the maximum loss is the net debit.
Above strike C, losses grow without limit as the uncovered short call at C loses value. The ladder is used by traders who want to enter a bullish debit spread at reduced or zero cost but have high conviction that the stock will not exceed the upper strike. The third short call is effectively a "free" way to finance the lower spread, at the price of a conditional risk above C. This strategy requires rigorous stop-loss discipline above the highest strike.
It is suited for moderately bullish scenarios where the stock has a natural resistance level at the upper strike that makes a continued rally seem unlikely..
When to Use It — EdgeOS Signal Integration
- ✓Ideal when SCTR > 9 and EdgeOS bull count = 1 (fresh ignition trigger)
- ✓Extension score below 0.8 (Tight or Mod) — stock has room to run
- ✓Confirmed or fluid bullish trend — EMA alignment supports the direction
Compare with Similar Strategies
Other Ladders Strategies
Build this strategy in the workspace
See live SCTR scores, bull/bear counts, and Saty ATR levels for every stock — then paper trade the Bull Call Ladder with real-time data before committing real capital.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Bull Call Ladder options strategy?
The bull call ladder extends the bull call spread by adding a third sold call at a higher strike. The extra short call further reduces the cost of the trade (or can generate a credit) but creates unlimited risk above the highest strike.
When should I use the Bull Call Ladder?
Moderately bullish — expecting the stock to rise to a specific range (between B and C) but not dramatically higher; willing to accept unlimited risk above C for lower cost entry
What is the maximum loss on the Bull Call Ladder?
The maximum loss on the Bull Call Ladder is theoretically unlimited — the position has an uncovered short leg that can lose without bound if the stock moves against you. Always use strict stop-loss rules.
How does the Bull Call Ladder compare to similar strategies?
The Bull Call Ladder is a moderately bullish complex strategy. Compared to the Bull Call Spread (bullish, debit), the Bull Call Ladder has unlimited 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.