HPE Long Put Strategy
HPE (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company), in the Technology sector, (Communication Equipment industry), listed on NYSE.
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company provides solutions that allow customers to capture, analyze, and act upon data seamlessly in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, the Asia Pacific, and Japan. The company offers general purpose servers for multi-workload computing and workload-optimized servers; HPE ProLiant rack and tower servers; HPE BladeSystem and HPE Synergy; and solutions for secondary workloads and traditional tape, storage networking, and disk products, such as HPE Modular Storage Arrays and HPE XP. It also offers HPE Apollo and Cray products; and HPE Superdome Flex, HPE Nonstop, HPE Integrity, and HPE Edgeline products. In addition, the company provides HPE Aruba product portfolio that includes wired and wireless local area network hardware products, such as Wi-Fi access points, switches, routers, and sensors; HPE Aruba software and services comprising cloud-based management, network management, network access control, analytics and assurance, and location; and professional and support services, as well as as-a-service and consumption models for the intelligent edge portfolio of products. Further, it offers various leasing, financing, IT consumption, and utility programs and asset management services for customers to facilitate technology deployment models and the acquisition of complete IT solutions, including hardware, software, and services from Hewlett Packard Enterprise and others. Additionally, the company invests in communications and media solutions.
HPE (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company) trades in the Technology sector, specifically Communication Equipment, with a market capitalization of approximately $42.57B, a beta of 1.30 versus the broader market, a 52-week range of 17.025-32.53, average daily share volume of 16.9M, a public-listing history dating back to 2015, approximately 61K full-time employees. These structural characteristics shape how HPE stock options price implied volatility around earnings windows, capital events, and macro-driven sector rotations.
A beta of 1.30 places HPE roughly in line with broader market moves, so the strategy payoff and realized volatility track the index-equivalent baseline. HPE pays a dividend, which adjusts put-call parity and shifts the ex-dividend pricing across the listed chain.
What is a long put on HPE?
A long put buys downside exposure with a fixed maximum loss equal to the premium paid; profit accrues if the underlying closes below the strike minus premium at expiration.
Current HPE snapshot
As of May 15, 2026, spot at $33.14, ATM IV 61.06%, IV rank 76.12%, expected move 17.51%. The long put on HPE below is built from the same end-of-day chain, with strikes snapped to listed contracts and premiums pulled from the bid/ask midpoint at a 28-day expiry.
Why this long put structure on HPE specifically: HPE IV at 61.06% is rich versus its 1-year range, which makes a premium-buying HPE long put relatively expensive in absolute-cost terms, with a market-implied 1-standard-deviation move of approximately 17.51% (roughly $5.80 on the underlying). The 28-day window matched to the front-month expiry keeps theta exposure bounded while still capturing the post-snapshot move; longer-dated HPE expiries trade a higher absolute premium for lower per-day decay. Position sizing on HPE should anchor to the underlying notional of $33.14 per share and to the trader's directional view on HPE stock.
HPE long put setup
The HPE long put below is built from the end-of-day chain, with each option leg priced at the bid/ask midpoint of its listed strike. With HPE near $33.14, the first option leg uses a $33.00 strike; additional legs (when the strategy has them) anchor to spot-relative offsets. Premiums come from the bid/ask midpoint on the listed HPE chain at a 28-day expiry; the cross-strike IV skew is reflected directly in the per-leg values rather than approximated. Quantity sizing assumes one contract per option leg (or 100 HPE shares for the stock leg in covered calls and collars).
| Action | Type | Strike / Basis | Premium (est) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buy 1 | Put | $33.00 | $2.11 |
HPE long put risk and reward
- Net Premium / Debit
- -$211.00
- Max Profit (per contract)
- $3,088.00
- Max Loss (per contract)
- -$211.00
- Breakeven(s)
- $30.89
- Risk / Reward Ratio
- 14.635
Max profit equals the strike minus premium times 100 (reached at zero); max loss equals the premium times 100. Breakeven is strike minus premium.
HPE long put payoff curve
Modeled P&L at expiration across a range of underlying prices for the long put on HPE. Each row is one sampled price point from the computed payoff curve; the full curve uses 200 price points internally before being summarized into 10 rows here.
| Underlying Price | % From Spot | P&L at Expiration |
|---|---|---|
| $0.01 | -100.0% | +$3,088.00 |
| $7.34 | -77.9% | +$2,355.37 |
| $14.66 | -55.8% | +$1,622.73 |
| $21.99 | -33.6% | +$890.10 |
| $29.32 | -11.5% | +$157.47 |
| $36.64 | +10.6% | -$211.00 |
| $43.97 | +32.7% | -$211.00 |
| $51.29 | +54.8% | -$211.00 |
| $58.62 | +76.9% | -$211.00 |
| $65.95 | +99.0% | -$211.00 |
When traders use long put on HPE
Long puts on HPE hedge an existing long HPE stock position or express a bearish view with defined risk; position sizing typically scales the put notional to the underlying HPE exposure being hedged.
HPE thesis for this long put
The market-implied 1-standard-deviation range for HPE extends from approximately $27.34 on the downside to $38.94 on the upside. A HPE long put expresses a directional view that the underlying closes below the strike minus premium at expiration, frequently sized to hedge an existing long HPE position with one put per 100 shares held. Current HPE IV rank near 76.12% sits in the upper third of its 1-year distribution, which historically reverts; this raises the bar for premium-buying structures and lowers it for premium-selling structures on HPE at 61.06%. As a Technology name, HPE options can move on sector-level news flow (peer earnings, regulatory updates, industry-specific macro data) in addition to HPE-specific events.
HPE long put positions are structurally bearish; the modeled P&L assumes European-style exercise at expiration and ignores early assignment, transaction costs, dividends paid before expiry on the stock leg (when present), and the bid-ask spread on the listed chain. HPE positions also carry Technology sector concentration risk; news flow inside the sector (peer earnings, regulatory shifts, supply-chain headlines) can move HPE alongside the broader basket even when HPE-specific fundamentals are unchanged. Long-premium structures like a long put on HPE are particularly exposed to IV-crush risk through scheduled events (earnings, FDA decisions, central-bank meetings) where IV typically contracts post-event regardless of the directional outcome. Always rebuild the position from current HPE chain quotes before placing a trade.
Frequently asked questions
- What is a long put on HPE?
- A long put on HPE is the long put strategy applied to HPE (stock). The strategy is structurally bearish: A long put buys downside exposure with a fixed maximum loss equal to the premium paid; profit accrues if the underlying closes below the strike minus premium at expiration. With HPE stock trading near $33.14, the strikes shown on this page are snapped to the nearest listed HPE chain strike and the premiums come straight from the end-of-day bid/ask midpoint.
- How are HPE long put max profit and max loss calculated?
- Max profit equals the strike minus premium times 100 (reached at zero); max loss equals the premium times 100. Breakeven is strike minus premium. For the HPE long put priced from the end-of-day chain at a 30-day expiry (ATM IV 61.06%), the computed maximum profit is $3,088.00 per contract and the computed maximum loss is -$211.00 per contract. Live intraday quotes will differ as the chain moves through the trading session.
- What is the breakeven for a HPE long put?
- The breakeven for the HPE long put priced on this page is roughly $30.89 at expiration, derived from end-of-day chain premiums. Breakeven is the underlying price at which the strategy's P&L crosses zero ignoring transaction costs and assignment risk. The current HPE market-implied 1-standard-deviation expected move is approximately 17.51%; if the move sits well outside the breakeven distance, the structure's risk-reward becomes correspondingly tighter.
- When should you consider a long put on HPE?
- Long puts on HPE hedge an existing long HPE stock position or express a bearish view with defined risk; position sizing typically scales the put notional to the underlying HPE exposure being hedged.
- How does current HPE implied volatility affect this long put?
- HPE ATM IV is at 61.06% with IV rank near 76.12%, which is elevated relative to its 1-year range. Premium-selling structures (covered call, cash-secured put, iron condor) generally look more attractive when IV rank is high; premium-buying structures (long call, long put, debit spreads) are more expensive in that regime.