Zebra Short
Also known as: ZEBRA Short, Zero Extrinsic Back Ratio Short
Strongly bearish with low implied volatility — want short-stock-like downside participation with defined risk above
Risk Profile at a Glance
How to Construct the Zebra Short
- 1.Buy 2 deep ITM puts at strike A
- 2.Sell 1 ATM put at strike B
- 3.Net debit
Understanding the Zebra Short
The ZEBRA Short is the bearish mirror of the ZEBRA Long — it uses two deep in-the-money puts and one short at-the-money put to create a position that moves nearly 1:1 with a falling stock price while capping the maximum loss at the net debit paid. The two deep ITM puts have near-zero extrinsic value and high delta, giving stock-like exposure to downside moves. The short ATM put reduces the cost by selling its extrinsic value. ZEBRA Shorts are used by traders who want to replicate short stock exposure with defined risk — useful for bearish trades where borrowing stock is difficult or expensive, or when you want to precisely define your maximum loss ahead of a binary event.
The strategy profits maximally when the stock collapses below the long put strikes and loses the net debit if the stock closes at or above the upper strike at expiration. In the EdgeOS context, ZEBRA shorts are ideal for bear count T1 ignition entries where the trader wants aggressive downside exposure with a hard-capped maximum loss..
When to Use It — EdgeOS Signal Integration
- ✓Ideal when SCTR < 4 and EdgeOS bear count = 1 (fresh bear trigger)
- ✓Extension score at or above 0.8 with stock near the upper ATR level
- ✓Confirmed or fluid bearish trend — EMA alignment supports the short side
Compare with Similar Strategies
Other Advanced Structures Strategies
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Zebra Short options strategy?
The ZEBRA Short is the bearish mirror of the ZEBRA Long — it uses two deep in-the-money puts and one short at-the-money put to create a position that moves nearly 1:1 with a falling stock price while capping the maximum loss at the net debit paid. The two deep ITM puts have near-zero extrinsic value and high delta, giving stock-like exposure to downside moves.
When should I use the Zebra Short?
Strongly bearish with low implied volatility — want short-stock-like downside participation with defined risk above
What is the maximum loss on the Zebra Short?
The maximum loss is fully defined at entry: the net debit paid (for debit strategies) or the spread width minus the credit received (for credit spreads). You can never lose more than this amount.
How does the Zebra Short compare to similar strategies?
The Zebra Short is a bearish debit strategy. Compared to the Long Put (bearish, debit), the Zebra Short has limited max risk and unlimited 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.