Files
ollama-model-training-5060ti/training_data/relevant/text/5c7515cd28edae0aa8d8b676e3fdbe23e89d3b29520f26c84c2b1cc7ed99804c.txt

37 lines
1.4 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Blame History

This file contains invisible Unicode characters
This file contains invisible Unicode characters that are indistinguishable to humans but may be processed differently by a computer. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.
Calendar Spreads
A calendar spread, also frequently called a time spread, involves the sale of one
option and the simultaneous purchase of a more distant option, both with the same
striking price. In the broad definition, the calendar spread is a horizontal spread. The
neutral philosophy for using calendar spreads is that time will erode the value of the
near-term option at a faster rate than it will the far-term option. If this happens, the
spread will widen and a profit may result at near-term expiration. With call options,
one may construct a more aggressive, bullish calendar spread. Both types of spreads
are discussed.
Example: The following prices exist sometime in late January:
XYZ:50
April 50 Call
(3-month call)
5
July 50 Call
(6-month call)
8
October 50 Call
(9-month call)
10
If one sells the April 50 call and buys the July 50 at the same time, he will pay a debit
of 3 points - the difference in the call prices plus commissions. That is, his invest­
ment is the net debit of the spread plus commissions. Furthermore, suppose that in 3
months, at April expiration, XYZ is unchanged at 50. Then the 3-month call should
be worth 5 points, and the 6-month call should be worth 8 points, as they were pre­
viously, all other factors being equal.
XYZ:50
April 50 Call
(Expiring)
0
July 50 Call
(3-month call)
5
October 50 Call
(6-month call)
8
191