Long Calendar Spread

A long calendar spread sells a near-term option and buys a later-expiry option at the same strike — a time-decay arbitrage that profits when the underlying stays near the strike while the short option decays faster than the long.

-199-2010200underlyingP&L
Max profit
-200
Max loss
-200
Breakeven(s)

When to use

Use when you expect the underlying to stay near a specific price for the next few weeks but expect a larger move later. Also useful when near-term implied volatility is elevated relative to further-dated implied volatility (a steep term-structure).

Risk profile

Maximum loss is the net debit paid (the long expiry costs more than the short). Maximum profit occurs when the underlying is at the strike at front-month expiration and is limited by the remaining value of the back-month option. Note: this expiration-only model approximates the calendar with same-strike options at a single expiry — the real edge is the differential time decay (theta) between the two expiry dates.

FAQ

Why does a calendar spread profit from time passing?

The near-term short option loses time value faster (higher theta) than the longer-dated long option. When the stock stays near the strike, you profit from this differential decay — you are essentially long theta on the spread.

What is the risk of a calendar spread if the stock moves sharply?

A large directional move hurts a calendar because both options gain or lose intrinsic value similarly, eliminating the time-value edge. The position is effectively short gamma — it loses money on big moves in either direction.

Does implied volatility help or hurt a long calendar?

Rising implied volatility generally helps a long calendar because the back-month option (which you own) has more vega than the front-month option (which you are short). A volatility expansion after entry increases the spread value.