On paper, the iron condor is the most elegant way to attack a chain like SPCX. The implied volatility is enormous on both sides, the trade is market-neutral so I do not have to guess direction, and the risk is fully defined. It looks perfect. And on a one-week-old IPO with a small float, "looks perfect" is precisely the signal to shrink my size, not grow it. Let me walk through the trade honestly — the upside and the trap.
What an iron condor actually is
An iron condor is two credit spreads sold at the same time, one on each side of the stock:
- A bull put spread below the price — sell a put, buy a lower put. (The trade in my bull put spread piece.)
- A bear call spread above the price — sell a call, buy a higher call.
With SPCX near 190, a condor might look like this:
| Leg | Action | Strike |
|---|---|---|
| Buy put | Buy | 150 |
| Sell put | Sell | 165 |
| Sell call | Sell | 215 |
| Buy call | Buy | 230 |
I collect premium from both spreads at once — on this inflated chain, perhaps 9 to 10 dollars of total credit. I keep all of it if SPCX simply finishes between 165 and 215 at expiration. My loss is capped on both ends by the long wings (150 and 230). It is defined-risk, two-sided, and it profits from the one thing a fresh listing is almost guaranteed to eventually do: stop being quite so volatile.
The thesis is clean: I am selling expensive fear on the downside and expensive greed on the upside, and collecting twice the premium for betting the stock lands in a wide middle.
Why I still size this one tiny — the gamma squeeze
Here is the part the elegant payoff diagram hides. SPCX has a small tradable float and no positioning history. That is the textbook setup for a gamma squeeze, and the short call is where it bites.
A gamma squeeze works like this: as the stock climbs toward heavily-owned call strikes, the market makers who sold those calls must buy stock to stay hedged. Their buying pushes the price higher, which forces them to buy even more — a self-reinforcing spiral. On a thin float, there are not enough freely-trading shares to absorb that buying, so the move can be violent and far larger than any "normal" volatility model would predict. Desks that track positioning have flagged exactly this risk on SPCX, with squeeze scenarios pointing well above the current range.
My short 215 call is short gamma. In a squeeze, it is the leg that runs against me fastest, and because the upside of a squeeze is open-ended while my long 230 wing only protects me 15 points up, I would hit my defined max loss on the call side quickly and stay pinned there. The condor caps my loss — that part is real and good — but it makes the maximum loss far more likely than the pretty probabilities suggest, because the small float skews the odds toward a big upside move.
How I trade it anyway — defensively
I do not avoid the condor. I respect it. The adjustments:
- Tiny size. Whatever number of condors looks reasonable, I cut it to a quarter of that. The whole position is sized so that hitting max loss on the call side is an annoyance, not an event.
- Asymmetric strikes. I push the call side further out of the money than the put side — sell the 220 or 225 call instead of 215 — even though it collects less premium. I want more room above the stock, because that is where the dangerous tail lives. A symmetric condor on a squeezable name is a mistake.
- Front of the catalyst. I keep the expiration well in front of November earnings. I never want to be short a condor through SpaceX's first public report, where a gap either way blows through a wing.
- Manage early. I take profit at 50% of the credit and I do not wait for expiration. If the stock runs toward my call strike, I close or roll the call side up rather than hoping it comes back.
The honest comparison
If you are new to this chain and you want the safest single trade, it is not the condor — it is the one-sided bull put spread, which only has to be right that SpaceX does not collapse. The condor adds a second income stream by also selling the upside, but on a small-float IPO the upside is the riskier side to sell. You are collecting more premium in exchange for taking on the exact tail risk — a squeeze — that this stock is most prone to. That can be a fine trade if you size it for that reality. It is a disaster if you size it for the seductive payoff diagram.
Bottom line
The SPCX iron condor is a real, defined-risk way to sell both sides of an inflated chain — and the small float makes its prettiest feature, the upside short call, its biggest liability. Sell it small, skew it away from the squeeze, stay in front of the catalyst. When a trade looks too perfect on a one-week-old IPO, the market is usually charging you for a tail you cannot see on the diagram.
This is not advice and not a recommendation. It is how I, Ruslan Averin, weigh a setup like this, recorded at averin.com.
— Ruslan Averin
