Table of Contents

Horizontal Spread (also known as a 'Calendar Spread')

A Horizontal Spread is a clever options strategy that plays the calendar, not just the stock. Imagine you're in the business of selling concert tickets. You buy a ticket for a superstar's concert a year from now, and at the same time, you sell a ticket for their show next month. That's the essence of a horizontal spread. In investment terms, it involves buying and selling two options of the same type (either two call options or two put options) and the same strike price, but with different expiration dates. The primary goal isn't to bet on a massive price swing in the underlying stock but to profit from the relentless march of time and its effect on option prices. The option you sell, with its closer expiration date, loses value much faster than the one you buy, which has more time on its side. This difference in the rate of time decay (also known by its Greek letter name, theta) is where the profit opportunity lies. It’s a strategy for those who believe time is, quite literally, money.

How Does It Work?

At its core, the horizontal spread is a tale of two options: one short-term and one long-term. The setup involves simultaneously executing two trades on the same underlying asset, like a stock or an ETF.

The Classic Setup: The Long Calendar Spread

This is the most common version of the strategy and is generally considered a neutral to bullish approach.

  1. Step 1: You sell an option that expires in the near term (e.g., next month). This is your “short” option. By selling it, you collect a premium.
  2. Step 2: You buy an option of the same type and strike price that expires further in the future (e.g., in three months or a year). This is your “long” option.

Because the longer-dated option has more time value, it will be more expensive. Therefore, setting up this spread requires a net payment from you, making it a debit spread. Example: Let’s say you think Apple Inc. (AAPL), currently trading at $170, will stay relatively stable for the next month. You could:

Your maximum profit is realized if AAPL's stock price is exactly at your strike price ($175) when the short-term option expires. At this point, the short option expires worthless (you keep the premium!), while your long option still retains significant time value, which you can then sell. Your maximum loss is limited to the initial amount you paid to put on the spread.

Why Would an Investor Use a Horizontal Spread?

Investors are drawn to horizontal spreads for a few key reasons, many of which resonate with a prudent investment philosophy.

The Value Investor's Perspective

While options are often seen as tools for speculation, the horizontal spread can be used in a manner that aligns with value investing principles. A core tenet of value investing is the margin of safety—protecting your downside. The defined-risk nature of a long calendar spread fits this principle perfectly. You know your maximum possible loss upfront, which allows for disciplined position sizing and risk management. Furthermore, a value investor who has identified a wonderful company trading at a fair price might not expect the stock to soar overnight. They may believe it will chug along steadily. In this scenario, a horizontal spread allows the investor to:

However, it's not a passive strategy. It requires monitoring, especially as the short option's expiration date approaches. For the disciplined value investor, the horizontal spread is a sophisticated tool that, when understood and used correctly, can help manage risk and generate income from the simple, powerful, and inevitable passage of time.