BATRA P&L Curve
Atlanta Braves Holdings, Inc. (BATRA) operates in the Communication Services sector, specifically the Entertainment industry, with a market capitalization near $3.43B, listed on NASDAQ, employing roughly 1,450 people, carrying a beta of 0.83 to the broader market. Atlanta Braves Holdings, through its wholly-owned subsidiary Braves Holdings, LLC, indirectly owns the Atlanta Braves Major League Baseball club and the associated mixed-use development project, The Battery Atlanta. Led by Terence Foster McGuirk, public since 2016-04-18.
A profit/loss curve charts the theoretical gain or loss of an options position across a range of underlying prices. It helps traders visualize risk, identify breakeven points, and compare strategies before committing capital.
- Exchange
- NASDAQ
- Sector
- Communication Services
- Industry
- Entertainment
- Market Cap
- $3.43B
- Employees
- 1.4K
- IPO Date
- 2016-04-18
- CEO
- Terence Foster McGuirk
- Beta
- 0.83
At the current $54.06 spot price with 31.5% ATM implied volatility and 34 days to the front expiration, an at-the-money long straddle carries an approximate combined premium near $4.16, producing breakevens at roughly $49.90 and $58.22. Market-implied 1-standard-deviation range extends from $49.18 to $58.94, which sets the relevant P&L evaluation window for most near-term strategies. Payoff diagrams should be rebuilt from the live options chain; the preceding values are illustrative and assume a single at-the-money straddle for reference.
Frequently asked BATRA pl curve questions
- What does a BATRA ATM straddle cost today?
- Using current BATRA pricing (31.5% ATM IV, 34-day front expiration, $54.06 spot), an at-the-money long straddle (long call + long put at the same strike) carries an approximate combined premium near $4.16 per spread. Breakevens land at roughly $58.22 on the upside and $49.90 on the downside. The estimate uses the Brenner-Subrahmanyam approximation for at-the-money options under Black-Scholes.
- How do I read an options P&L curve?
- An options P&L curve plots theoretical position value at expiration (or at any chosen evaluation date) against the underlying price. The X-axis is the underlying price scenario, the Y-axis is position dollar P&L. The shape of the curve tells you the strategy's directional sensitivity, breakeven points, maximum profit and loss levels, and where time decay or volatility shifts will be most impactful. Multi-leg structures combine the curves of the individual legs to produce composite payoff diagrams.
- What's the difference between a P&L curve and a payoff diagram?
- Strictly: a payoff diagram shows option value at expiration (no time premium left), while a P&L curve typically shows position value at any evaluation date (with remaining time premium). The expiration payoff diagram has kinks at the strikes; the early P&L curve is smooth. For directional-vega trades, the early P&L curve also responds to IV shifts that the expiration payoff diagram does not capture - which is why options traders often look at both views.
- Why are illustrative BATRA P&L numbers approximate?
- The numbers above use Black-Scholes assumptions (lognormal returns, constant volatility, no early exercise, no dividends). Real-world option prices reflect skew, term structure, jump risk, and (for US-style options) early exercise premium. Use the live options chain for actual quoted bid/ask prices when sizing trades; the values here illustrate magnitude only.