Put Ratio Spread 1x2 vs Bear Put Spread
Bullish vs bearish — different outlook and structure
When to Choose Each
- ✓Direction is bullish — expecting upside
- ✓Comfortable with multi-leg position management
- ✓Prefer High IV environment — IV is elevated and likely to contract
- ✓Regime: 🟢 Bull, 🟡 Chop
- ✓Direction is bearish — expecting downside
- ✓Prefer paying defined cost for leverage
- ✓Any IV environment — IV level is not the primary driver
- ✓Regime: 🔴 Bear
Risk / Reward Summary
The Put Ratio Spread 1x2 has unlimited max risk, while the Bear Put Spread has limited max risk — a meaningful difference if capital preservation is a priority. Max reward is also identical (limited) for both. Structure differs: Put Ratio Spread 1x2 is a complex strategy; Bear Put Spread is a debit strategy. This changes how time decay (theta) and IV changes (vega) affect you differently on each trade.
EdgeOS Signal Relevance
The Put Ratio Spread 1x2 fits an EdgeOS bullish context (SCTR > 9, bull count active). The Bear Put Spread fits an EdgeOS bearish context (SCTR < 4, bear count active). Switching between the two strategies depends on which EdgeOS signal is active at entry.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between Put Ratio Spread 1x2 and Bear Put Spread?
The Put Ratio Spread 1x2 is a bullish complex strategy with unlimited max risk and limited max reward. The Bear Put Spread is a bearish debit strategy with limited max risk and limited max reward. The Put Ratio Spread 1x2 has unlimited max risk, while the Bear Put Spread has limited max risk — a meaningful difference if capital preservation is a priority. Max reward is also identical (limited) for both. Structure differs: Put Ratio Spread 1x2 is a complex strategy; Bear Put Spread is a debit strategy. This changes how time decay (theta) and IV changes (vega) affect you differently on each trade.
Which is better, Put Ratio Spread 1x2 or Bear Put Spread?
Neither is universally better. Use the Put Ratio Spread 1x2 when: Slightly bullish or neutral to moderately bearish down to strike B — want to enter for zero cost while having maximum profit when the stock hits strike B at expiration. Use the Bear Put Spread when: Moderately bearish — want to profit from a decline without the full cost of a long put, accepting a capped reward at the lower strike. The best choice depends on your directional bias, IV environment, and risk tolerance.
When should I use Put Ratio Spread 1x2 vs Bear Put Spread?
Choose Put Ratio Spread 1x2 for a bullish outlook in prefer high iv conditions with bull/chop regime. Choose Bear Put Spread for a bearish outlook in any iv conditions with bear regime.
Strategy Pages
Build and compare payoff diagrams
Visualize the exact payoff curves for the Put Ratio Spread 1x2 and Bear Put Spread side by side with live data in the strategy builder.