12. What Is a Calendar Spread?
A neutral options strategy that profits from time decay and volatility shifts.
Definition: Calendar Spread
A calendar spread (also called a time spread) is an advanced options strategy where a trader:
- Buys a long-dated option (farther expiry)
- Sells a short-dated option (nearer expiry)
- Both at the same strike price and on the same underlying
This strategy aims to profit from the difference in time decay (theta) between the two options and sometimes from volatility expansion.
Components of a Calendar Spread
| Leg | Option Type | Strike | Expiry | Purpose |
|---|
| Long Position | Call or Put | ₹ 100 | Far expiry (e.g., 1 month) | Holds value longer |
| Short Position | Call or Put | ₹ 100 | Near expiry (e.g., 1 week) | Decays faster, generates income |
You can create calendar spreads using either calls or puts.
When to Use a Calendar Spread
- You expect the underlying to stay near a specific price (strike price)
- You expect low price movement in the short term
- You expect implied volatility to rise in the long-term option
- Ideal during consolidation or sideways markets
Example
Stock XYZ is trading at ₹100.
You set up a call calendar spread:
- Buy ₹100 Call (1-month expiry) @ ₹10
- Sell ₹100 Call (1-week expiry) @ ₹4
- Net Cost (Debit) = ₹6
Potential Outcomes at Short-Term Expiry
| Stock Price at 1st Expiry | Short Option (Sold) | Long Option (Held) | Net Outcome |
|---|
| ₹ 90 | Expires worthless | Minimal value left | Small loss |
| ₹ 100 | Expires worthless | Still holds value | Best profit |
| ₹ 110 | Intrinsic value loss | Gains in long option | Neutral / Loss |
The ideal result is that the short option expires worthless, and the long option retains value — leading to a net gain.
Key Characteristics
| Feature | Calendar Spread |
|---|
| View | Neutral / Volatility-based |
| Time Decay (Theta) | Positive |
| Max Profit | Near strike at short expiry |
| Max Loss | Net debit paid |
| Strategy Cost | Medium (debit strategy) |
| Implied Volatility Benefit | Profit increases if IV rises |
Risks
- Directional move hurts: If the stock moves far from the strike, both options may lose value
- Volatility drop: A fall in IV can reduce value of the long-dated option
- Short option assignment: If the short option moves ITM, early assignment is possible
Key Takeaways
- A calendar spread profits from time decay differences between long- and short-term options at the same strike
- It performs best when the underlying price stays near the strike price through the first expiry
- The strategy benefits from a rise in implied volatility and sideways market conditions
- It involves a limited risk (net debit) and has a defined reward zone around the strike
- Traders use calendar spreads to profit from consolidation periods or before volatility spikes