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Broken Wing Butterfly: Advanced Options Strategy

The broken wing butterfly (BWB) is an advanced options strategy that modifies the traditional butterfly spread by using unequal wing widths. This asymmetry can eliminate risk on one side of the trade while maintaining significant profit potential. Often entered for a credit, the BWB is popular among income traders who want directional bias with defined risk.

What is a Broken Wing Butterfly?

A broken wing butterfly is a butterfly spread where the wings are not equidistant from the body. In a traditional butterfly, both wings are the same distance from the middle strike. In a BWB, one wing is further away (the "broken" wing).

The key benefit: By widening one wing, you collect more credit on that side. If set up correctly, you can eliminate risk on the "broken" side completely while only having risk on the other side. This creates an asymmetric risk/reward profile.

Types of Broken Wing Butterflies

Put Broken Wing Butterfly (Skip-Strike Put Butterfly)

Most common type. Risk is to the downside, no risk to the upside:

Call Broken Wing Butterfly

Risk is to the upside, no risk to the downside:

Example: Put Broken Wing Butterfly

Stock XYZ is at $100. You set up a put BWB:

Net credit: $3.00 + $3.00 - $3.00 - $0.30 = -$0.30 (small debit)

Or with better fills, this could be a credit.

Risk profile:

How the BWB Eliminates Upside Risk

In a put BWB, here is what happens if the stock rallies:

The "no upside risk" occurs when you can enter the trade for a credit. Any rally means all options expire worthless, and you keep the credit.

Example: No Upside Risk BWB

You enter a put BWB for a $0.50 credit:

Stock at $110 at expiration: All puts worthless. You keep $0.50 credit.

Stock at $102 at expiration: All puts worthless. You keep $0.50 credit.

No matter how high the stock goes, your profit is at least $0.50.

Profit and Loss Profile

Maximum Profit

Occurs when the stock is at the short strike (middle) at expiration. The profit equals the width of the narrower wing plus the credit received (or minus the debit paid).

No Risk Zone

On the "broken" side (wider wing). If entered for a credit, you profit. If entered for a debit, you have a small fixed loss.

Maximum Loss

Occurs when the stock moves past the outer strike on the narrow wing side. Maximum loss = width of wider wing - width of narrower wing - credit received.

Break-Even

Calculated based on specific strikes and premium received. Typically closer to the narrow wing side.

Think of it this way: You are sacrificing balanced risk for a directional bias. You accept more risk on one side in exchange for little or no risk on the other side.

Setting Up a Winning BWB

Follow these guidelines for optimal BWB construction:

Strike Selection

Credit vs Debit Entry

Time to Expiration

Example: Well-Constructed Put BWB

Stock at $500. You expect it to stay above $480.

Narrow wing: $500-$490 = $10

Broken wing: $490-$470 = $20

Profile:

BWB vs Regular Butterfly

Regular Butterfly

Broken Wing Butterfly

Managing a Broken Wing Butterfly

Trade Going Well (Stock Near Short Strike)

Stock Moving to No-Risk Side

Stock Moving to Risk Side

When to Use Broken Wing Butterflies

BWBs work best when:

Common BWB Mistakes

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Summary

The broken wing butterfly is an advanced strategy that creates asymmetric risk by using unequal wing widths. When entered for a credit, it eliminates risk on one side while maintaining significant profit potential if the stock settles near the short strikes. It combines the benefits of a butterfly spread with the directional bias of a credit spread, making it ideal for traders with a market view who want defined risk.

Learn more about related strategies in our guides on butterfly spreads, iron butterflies, and iron condors.