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Diagonal Backspreads 104: 1x2 Time-Structure Convexity

Diagonal backspreads sell one near-term call and buy two longer-dated higher-strike calls to pursue convex upside with reduced early carry cost.

Feb 20, 202611 min read

Structure and Intuition

A common template is sell 1 near-term lower-strike call, buy 2 longer-term higher-strike calls.

Example pricing: sell Apr 30 call for 3, buy 2 Jul 35 calls at 1.5 each -> roughly even-money entry.

If near-term short expires worthless, you can be left holding two longer-dated calls at very low effective basis.

Short Leg

1x near-term lower strike

Long Legs

2x longer-term higher strike

Entry Cash Flow

Often near flat or small credit/debit

Exposure Shape

Convex to later upside

Best and Worst Near-Term Outcomes

Best early path: underlying stays below short strike into near expiry, allowing cheap or zero-cost retention of long calls.

Worst early path: slight rise near short strike that can pressure both sides before convex upside fully develops.

Even in bad cases, loss is typically bounded compared with outright aggressive short-vol structures.

Diagonal Backspread Near-Expiry Shape (Illustrative)

  • profit
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Management Priorities

Priority 1: monitor early assignment risk on the short near-term call when it goes ITM.

Priority 2: define whether your objective is financing long convexity or monetizing near-term decay.

Priority 3: if a large rally arrives, consider staged profit-taking on long calls instead of waiting for terminal expiration.

The strategy works best when entry intent and management intent are aligned.

Concrete Trigger Framework

Trigger A (defensive): if spot closes above short strike and short delta keeps rising, cut or roll short risk quickly.

Trigger B (neutral): if spot remains below short strike with 7-10 days left, prioritize decay capture and avoid unnecessary adjustments.

Trigger C (offensive): if strong rally develops after short risk is controlled, scale out long calls in tranches to lock convex gains.

A: Defense

Spot > short strike + delta expansion

B: Hold

Spot < short strike into final 7-10 days

C: Monetize

Post-adjustment rally in long legs

Core Principle

Protect short side before chasing upside

Execution Checklist

Use liquid underlyings and strikes where both near and farther expiries trade tightly.

Pre-plan assignment handling and adjustment steps before entry.

Keep size moderate: these structures are convex but still path-sensitive.

Review the position at fixed checkpoints, not only when P/L feels uncomfortable.

Key takeaways

  • Diagonal backspreads combine ratio exposure with expiry separation.
  • They can reduce early carrying cost while preserving upside convexity.
  • The most fragile zone is often a small rise near short strike at near expiry.
  • Clear assignment and adjustment rules are mandatory.

Series

Diagonal Spread Masterclass

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