Beyond Panic: Take control when your derivatives trade turns red, says Shubham Agarwal

Beyond Panic: Take control when your derivatives trade turns red, says Shubham Agarwal

Updated on 13 Dec 2025 Category: Business • Author: Scoopliner Editorial Team
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Shubham Agarwal shares strategies to reshape your positions, reduce risk, and enhance reward potential when the market moves against you.


Financial markets often behave in the most unexpected way. You've done your homework. You've analyzed the derivatives data. You enter the trade with confidence. Then the market does what it does best: it moves against you.
Your carefully planned bullish trade on Stock X starts bleeding red as the price drops from 580 to 530. Most traders panic here, either holding onto losing positions, hoping for a miracle, or doubling down and increasing their risk. But what if there was a third option? What if you could reshape your position to reduce risk, improve reward potential, or buy more time for your view to play out when your original conviction remains intact?
Let's understand this through real examples.Scenario 1: Turning a losing position into a better structure
Say you're bullish on Stock X trading at 580. You buy a 580 call option for Rs. 23. The next day, the stock drops to 530, and your call is now worth just Rs. 7. Your initial reaction might be to hold and hope, or average down by buying more of the same option. Both approaches lock you into higher risk.
Here's where creativity helps. If you believe the stock will bounce from 530, buy a 530 call option trading at Rs. 22. Since many traders are stuck at the 580 level, it becomes a natural resistance point. Sell two 580 calls: one to exit your original position, and another to create a fresh trade. Your net position is now long 530 call at Rs. 22 and short 580 call at Rs. 8. This structure gives you better odds because you're positioned at the new support level rather than the old resistance.
Scenario 2: When your spread loses its edge
You entered a bull call spread at 580, buying the 580 call and selling the 620 call. The stock falls to 530. Your original spread now faces an uphill battle since 580 has turned into resistance. Instead of waiting and watching, adjust proactively. Exit the old 580-620 spread and create a new one by buying the 530 call and selling the 580 call. This new spread captures the full bounce potential from current levels, giving you a much higher probability of success.
Scenario 3: When time is running out
Sometimes the problem isn't direction but time. Imagine you're holding that same 580-620 bull call spread in December expiry, but the stock goes sideways. With just 10 days left to expiry, every passing day erodes your position's value, even if the stock doesn't move against you.
Solution? Roll the position forward. Square off the December spread and recreate the same 580-620 structure in the January expiry. This adjustment transforms a losing race against time into a viable trade with breathing room.
So next time the market moves against you, pause and ask yourself: Can I manage this trade creatively? Options give you flexibility that most instruments don't. Cultivate this habit consistently, and creative adjustments will become second nature.
Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by experts on Moneycontrol.com are their own and not those of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.

Source: Moneycontrol   •   13 Dec 2025

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