Synthetic Put (Synthetic Long Put): What It Is and How It Works
Overview
A synthetic put is an options strategy that replicates a long put by combining a short position in the underlying stock with a long call option on the same stock. Also called a synthetic long put, married call, or protective call, it provides downside exposure while limiting losses from a stock price rise.
How it Works
- Position components:
- Short one share of the underlying stock.
- Long one call option on that same stock (typically at-the-money or a chosen strike).
- Purpose: The short stock position profits if the stock falls. The long call limits losses if the stock rises, capping the upside risk of the short.
- Intuition: Short stock + long call behaves like owning a put option (i.e., synthetic long put).
Payoff and Key Formulas
Let S0 be the short sale price, K the call strike, and P the option premium paid.
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- Maximum gain = S0 − 0 − P = S0 − P (occurs if stock falls to zero).
- Maximum loss = S0 − K − P (loss above the call strike; if S0 = K, loss equals P).
- Breakeven = S0 − P (stock price at which combined position neither gains nor loses ignoring commissions/interest).
Note: These are simplified; commissions, margin interest, and dividend payments on borrowed shares affect net outcomes.
Risks and Costs
- Short-side risks: unlimited paper losses if stock rises, margin requirements, margin interest, recall of borrowed shares, and potential dividend payments to the lender.
- Option-related costs: premium paid, time decay (theta) erodes call value, and commissions.
- Volatility: Increased volatility generally benefits the long call; declining volatility hurts the option portion.
- Net exposure: While the call caps upside risk, other short-sale complications remain.
When to Use
- Insurance: To protect a bearish position from short-term price spikes without closing the short.
- Capital preservation: For investors who want to limit upside risk while maintaining a bearish exposure.
- Tactical/stealth trades: Institutional traders may use synthetic puts to conceal directional bias.
This strategy is typically used as protection rather than a pure profit-maximizing tactic, since the option premium reduces net returns if the stock falls.
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Example
- Short stock at S0 = $50.
- Buy a call with strike K = $50 for premium P = $3.
- Breakeven = $50 − $3 = $47.
- Maximum gain if stock → $0: $50 − $3 = $47 (per share).
- Maximum loss if stock rises above $50: $50 − $50 − $3 = −$3 above the strike, plus any additional losses beyond the capped amount are prevented by the call.
(Adjust figures for commissions and financing costs.)
Summary
A synthetic put (short stock + long call) provides put-like protection for bearish traders who want to limit losses from an upward move. It acts as insurance but carries short-sale-specific risks and the explicit cost of the call premium. Consider margin rules, dividend obligations, time decay, and commissions before using this strategy.