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Ratio Calendar Spreads 101: The Credit Calendar

A ratio calendar sells more near-term calls than it buys longer-term calls. It often starts as a credit and can profit if the stock stays below the strike.

Feb 19, 202612 min read

Why Choose This Strategy?

1. Get Paid to Wait (Credit vs. Debit): Unlike a standard calendar spread which costs money to open, a ratio calendar often generates a net credit. If the stock flatlines or drops, you profit immediately from the credit.

2. The "Free Ride" Potential: If the stock stays below the strike through the near-term expiration, the short calls expire worthless. You are left holding the long-term call for "free" (actually better than free, since you kept the initial credit).

3. Supercharged Theta: You are selling two sources of rapid time decay against one slower-decaying asset. As long as the strike isn't breached, time is your best friend.

4. Lower Volatility Risk: Standard calendars get hurt if Implied Volatility (IV) crushes. Because you are net short volatility (selling more than buying), an IV crush can actually help you relative to a standard calendar.

The goal is to survive the near-term to get a "free" long position for the long-term.

The Structure (Same Strike, Different Expiries)

A ratio calendar spread uses the same strike price but different expirations.

Buy fewer long-term calls and sell more near-term calls.

Because you sell more than you buy, the position includes a naked call and requires collateral.

Core thesis: the stock stays below the strike until the short calls expire.

Ratio Calendar Structure (Same Strike $50)

Far Term (e.g. July)

Near Term (e.g. April)

Same Strike

🟢 Buy 1x Call

🔴 Sell 2x Calls

Example: XYZ 45 with April/July 50 Calls

XYZ is at $45.

April $50 call trades at $1.00. July $50 call trades at $1.50.

Buy 1 July $50 for $1.50, sell 2 April $50 for $1.00 each.

Net Credit: $0.50.

Long Call

Buy 1 July $50

Short Calls

Sell 2 April $50

Net Credit

$0.50

Naked Calls

1 short call

Ratio Calendar P/L at April Expiration

  • profit
354045485052535560-1200-800-4000400

Deep Dive: Understanding the P/L Curve

The P/L profile of a ratio calendar is unique because it combines time decay and directional risk.

1. The Profit Peak ($50): Profit is maximized when the stock is exactly at the strike at April expiration. Both short calls expire worthless, but the July call is at-the-money and retains maximum time value. Your profit is the initial credit plus the entire value of the July call.

2. The Upside Danger Zone: Above $50, you are effectively net short 1 call. Even though the July call gains value, the naked April call loses intrinsic value dollar-for-dollar. Because the near-term call is expiring, its delta is higher than the long-term call, causing the position to lose money rapidly.

3. The Downside Floor: If the stock stays below $50, the shorts expire worthless. You are left with your initial credit and a July call. Even if the stock drops significantly, the credit acts as a buffer, and the long-term call still holds some residual value.

The "tent" peak is where you want to be, but the upside "cliff" is why you need a stop-loss.

Why Choose This Strategy?

1. Get Paid to Wait (Credit vs. Debit): Unlike a standard calendar spread which costs money to open, a ratio calendar often generates a net credit. If the stock flatlines or drops, you profit immediately from the credit.

2. The "Free Ride" Potential: If the stock stays below the strike through the near-term expiration, the short calls expire worthless. You are left holding the long-term call for "free" (actually better than free, since you kept the initial credit).

3. Supercharged Theta: You are selling two sources of rapid time decay against one slower-decaying asset. As long as the strike isn't breached, time is your best friend.

4. Lower Volatility Risk: Standard calendars get hurt if Implied Volatility (IV) crushes. Because you are net short volatility (selling more than buying), an IV crush can actually help you relative to a standard calendar.

The goal is to survive the near-term to get a "free" long position for the long-term.

Where It Fails

The danger is a fast rally before the near-term calls expire.

If the stock runs above the strike quickly, the naked short call can create large losses.

That is why a defensive action point is critical.

Best Case

Stock stays below strike into April

Good Case

Stock rallies after April

Bad Case

Fast rally before April

Key Discipline

Close at a pre-set trigger

Key takeaways

  • Ratio calendars sell more near-term calls than they buy long-term calls.
  • They are often established for a credit but require collateral due to a naked call.
  • Profit is likely if the stock stays below the strike into the near-term expiry.
  • Fast rallies before expiry are the main risk and require disciplined exits.

Series

Ratio Calendar Spread Masterclass

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