Call Diagonal Spread
Sell a near expiry call and buy a far expiry call at a higher strike. A calendar with a bearish tilt that earns from decay while the index stays capped.
Learn strategySell a near expiry call and buy a far expiry call at the same strike. Profits from time decay if the index stays near the strike.
By Team Agora Circle
Written by the Agora Circle editorial team. Educational content, explained for the Indian market. Not investment advice.
A call calendar spread, also called a horizontal or time spread, sells a near expiry call and buys a far expiry call at the same strike. Both are calls at the same level, so the position is not a directional bet. It is a bet on time and volatility: the near call loses time value faster than the far call, and the difference between them is where the profit comes from.
The trade works best when the index sits near the strike as the near expiry approaches. There the short near call decays toward zero while the long far call retains much of its time value, so the spread widens in your favour. If the index drifts far from the strike in either direction, both calls move together and the spread shrinks back toward its cost.
Because the two legs expire on different dates, the payoff cannot be drawn as a single expiry line. The most you can lose is the net debit, and the profit is realised around the strike at the near expiry, but the exact figure depends on how much time value and implied volatility remain in the far call at that moment.
Two calls at the same strike but different expiries, bought net long the further date.
Max Profit
Reached near the strike at the near expiry, from the value left in the far call. It has no fixed formula.
Max Loss
Limited to the net debit paid, if the index moves far from the strike either way.
Breakeven
Two levels either side of the strike that shift as the far call's value changes.
This strategy uses two different expiry dates, so a single expiry payoff diagram would be misleading. The value of the longer dated leg depends on the time and implied volatility still left in it when the nearer leg expires, which a fixed expiry chart cannot show. The example and the sections below describe how the position behaves instead.
Suppose NIFTY is at 25,000 and you expect it to stay near that level over the next week or two. You sell the near expiry 25,000 call for 120 and buy the far expiry 25,000 call for 200. The net debit is 80 points, about Rs 6,000 on a lot of 75, and that is your maximum loss.
If the index is still near 25,000 as the near expiry arrives, the short call you sold expires close to worthless, while the far call you own still holds meaningful time value. You can then close the far call for more than the net debit, banking the difference, or sell a fresh near call against it to repeat the cycle.
If instead the index runs away to 25,600 or falls to 24,400 by the near expiry, both calls move roughly together and the spread narrows, leaving you close to the maximum loss of 80 points. The trade needs the index to stay near the strike, not to move.
Enter both legs together as a spread so the net debit is fixed and there is no leg risk between fills.
The natural decision point is the near expiry. There you either close the whole spread to bank the gain, or roll by selling a new near call against the far call you still hold.
Because the position wants stillness, exit if the index breaks decisively away from the strike, since the edge from faster near decay disappears once both legs are far in or out of the money.
Time decay is the engine of this trade. The near call sits closer to expiry, so its time value bleeds away faster than the far call's, and that widening gap is the source of profit while the index stays near the strike.
This favourable decay is strongest when the index is right at the strike and both calls are at the money. The further the index drifts, the less the decay advantage matters.
The position is net long vega, concentrated in the far call, so a rise in implied volatility generally helps. Entering when volatility is low and expected to rise into the far expiry improves the odds.
The risk is a fall in implied volatility, which deflates the far call you own. Calendars entered when IV is high can suffer if volatility drops even while the index behaves, so the level of IV at entry matters as much as the index level.
The classic adjustment is rolling: at the near expiry, sell a fresh near call against the far call to collect more premium and lower the position's cost, turning a single calendar into a repeating income structure.
If the index drifts, you can roll the whole calendar to a new strike centred on the new level, keeping the position near the money.
If implied volatility has risen sharply and the far call has gained, closing the spread to bank the volatility gain can be better than waiting for the near expiry.
A calendar spread has no equivalent built from a single expiry, which is exactly what makes it distinct: its edge comes from the difference in time decay between two expiries at the same strike.
The closest cousins are the butterfly and the short straddle, which also profit when the index sits still, but they express that view within one expiry rather than across two.
Because its two legs expire on different dates. When the near call expires, the far call is still alive and its value depends on the time and implied volatility remaining in it, which a fixed expiry chart cannot capture. The profit is assessed at the near expiry, not at a single shared one.
Stay near the strike. The position profits from the near call decaying faster than the far call, which happens most cleanly when the index sits at the strike into the near expiry. A big move in either direction is the enemy.
The net debit paid, which occurs if the index moves far from the strike so that both calls move together and the spread collapses. In the example that is 80 points, or Rs 6,000 on one lot.
The position is net long vega through the far call, so rising implied volatility helps and falling IV hurts. Because of this, the IV level when you enter matters a great deal, and a calendar can lose even when the index cooperates if volatility drops.
At the near expiry, you sell a new near call against the far call you still hold. This collects fresh premium and lowers the cost of the position, letting you repeat the decay harvest month after month while you keep the longer dated call.
Sell a near expiry call and buy a far expiry call at a higher strike. A calendar with a bearish tilt that earns from decay while the index stays capped.
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Learn strategyThis page is for education only. It is not investment advice, and nothing here is a recommendation to buy or sell any instrument. Options involve substantial risk, and option sellers can lose far more than the premium they receive. Please do your own research or consult a SEBI registered investment adviser before trading. Read our full disclaimer.