Neutral to slightly directional - expecting price to stay near strike
| Strategy Type | Volatility / Time Decay Arbitrage |
| Market Outlook | Neutral to slightly directional - expecting price to stay near strike |
| Risk Profile | Limited to net debit paid |
| Reward Profile | Limited but can be substantial at optimal expiry |
| Time Horizon | Front month expiry to back month expiry (1-8 weeks typically) |
| Capital Requirement | Moderate (approx. C$40 - C$150 net debit per XIU calendar contract; higher for large-cap equity options and substantially higher for SXO index contracts) |
| Margin Type | Debit spread - no additional margin beyond premium paid (note: most registered accounts restrict spreads; typically traded in a non-registered/margin account) |
| Best Used When | Front month IV elevated relative to back month, expecting price stability near strike, anticipating IV expansion in back month |
| Mx Applicability | Applicable on S&P/TSX 60 Index options (SXO), liquid ETF options (XIU, XIC, XFN and similar) and major large-cap equity options listed on the Bourse de Montreal with multiple expiry cycles available |
| Regulatory Compliance | Fully compliant - standard exchange-traded options strategy. Listed options trade on the Bourse de Montreal (Montreal Exchange), overseen in Quebec by the Autorite des marches financiers (AMF); cleared and guaranteed by the Canadian Derivatives Clearing Corporation (CDCC); investment dealers and advisors are regulated nationally by the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization (CIRO), with securities regulation coordinated across provinces through the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) |
| Contract Sizes | C$100 per index point; European-style; cash-settled at the official opening level on expiry (no early assignment) • 100 units per contract; American-style; physically settled (delivery of units); contract size roughly one-tenth of an SXO contract • 100 shares per contract (standard; may be adjusted for splits/distributions); American-style; physically settled |
| Trading Hours | 9:30 AM - 4:00 PM ET (Eastern Time), aligned with the Toronto Stock Exchange cash session; markets quote and settle in Canadian dollars (CAD) |
| Expiry Considerations | Weekly expiries are available on the most active ETFs (including XIU) and large-cap stocks (Friday expiry); standard monthly options expire the third Friday. SXO index options are monthly only (no weeklies): the last trading day is the business day prior to the third Friday, with cash settlement on the third Friday. Ensure both legs have adequate liquidity |
| Tax Implications | Gains are taxed either as capital gains (50% inclusion rate for individuals, subject to legislative change) or as business income (100% taxable) depending on the frequency, sophistication and intent of trading, as determined by the CRA; frequent or systematic options trading is often assessed as business income. There is no securities transaction tax (no STT), but exchange/clearing fees and brokerage commissions apply. Track adjusted cost base (ACB) and beware the 30-day superficial loss rule. Calendars generally suit non-registered (cash/margin) accounts - see account notes in the disclaimer |
| Liquidity Notes | Best liquidity sits in ATM strikes of XIU and the largest names (RY, TD, ENB, SHOP, CNQ, BMO) and in the front two monthly expiries; far-month strikes and SXO series can show wider spreads. Canadian options markets are generally thinner than US options markets, so spread orders and patient limit fills matter |
Buying a single option means you fight time decay (theta) every day - your option loses value even if you're right about direction. Calendar spreads use time decay in your favor because you sell a faster-decaying near-term option. You also reduce cost basis significantly. The trade-off is limited profit potential and requirement for price to stay near your strike rather than moving significantly in your favor.
Yes. The Bourse de Montreal lists weekly options on the most active ETFs (including XIU) and large-cap stocks, so you can sell a current-week option and buy a next-week or monthly option. Weekly calendars capture rapid theta decay in the front leg. However, the shorter timeframe means less room for error - price must stay near strike within 4-5 days. Start with weekly-to-monthly calendars for more forgiveness before trying weekly-to-weekly. Note that SXO index options are monthly only, so weekly calendars are an XIU/equity strategy.
It depends on the instrument. For SXO index options (European-style, cash-settled) the front month simply settles in cash at the official opening level at expiry, with no early assignment. For XIU and equity options (American-style, physically settled), if the front month expires OTM it becomes worthless and you're left with just the long back-month option; if it expires ITM you face assignment - obligated to deliver shares (for calls) or buy shares (for puts) - and assignment risk also rises around ex-dividend dates. Always close 1-2 days before front expiry to avoid these complications.
Calendar spreads are debit strategies, so the capital requirement is just the premium paid plus commissions. For XIU ATM calendars, expect roughly C$40-150 net debit per contract (about C$0.40-1.50 x 100). Higher-priced names (e.g. RY, SHOP) cost more. A recommended minimum trading capital is around C$10,000-15,000+ to diversify across 2-3 positions while keeping each position under 10% of capital.
At the same ATM strike, call and put calendars have nearly identical risk-reward due to put-call parity. Choose based on: 1) Liquidity - whichever has tighter spreads, 2) Slight directional bias - calls if mildly bullish, puts if mildly bearish, 3) Skew - sometimes puts are cheaper due to elevated put IV. For most beginners trading ATM strikes, the difference is negligible.
Compare the IV of your specific strikes across expiries, not just the broad S&P/TSX 60 VIX. Front month IV should be equal to or higher than back month IV (flat to backwardated). Most option chains show IV per strike. Calculate the IV ratio: front IV / back IV. Ratios above 1.0 are favorable; below 0.95 is unfavorable. Also check IV percentile for each expiry - high front month percentile with lower back month percentile is ideal.
Roll when: 1) Position is at or above breakeven, 2) Your thesis of range-bound price action remains valid, 3) You can roll for reasonable cost (not more than 25% of remaining position value), 4) Back month still has adequate time remaining (>20 DTE after roll). Close when: 1) Position is losing significantly, 2) Thesis has changed (expecting breakout), 3) Roll cost is excessive, 4) Approaching profit target anyway.
Events between expiries create complex IV dynamics. Front month IV may be depressed (event is after expiry) while back month IV is elevated (event falls in that period). This 'IV kink' in the term structure can hurt calendars - you're selling cheap IV and buying expensive IV. Generally avoid calendars when a major event (earnings, Bank of Canada decision, FOMC) falls in the back month period. If the event is after both expiries, the effect is minimal.
Yes, calendars offer flexibility. You can: 1) Convert to diagonal by moving short strike (adjusts directional exposure), 2) Convert to double calendar by adding another calendar at different strike, 3) Convert to butterfly by adding another short at same expiry as front (changes to single-expiry), 4) Simply close front leg to remain with naked long option. Each conversion has trade-offs; evaluate based on new market outlook.
Near front expiry, the short front month option experiences extreme gamma (rate of delta change). Small price moves cause large delta swings. Theta accelerates but gamma risk often outweighs theta benefit. Vega collapses in front month while remaining stable in back month, changing your net vega exposure. This Greek instability is why experts close or roll 3-5 days before front expiry - the edge from theta no longer compensates for gamma risk.
To profit from term structure steepening (back month IV rising relative to front), enter calendars when structure is flat or slightly backwardated. The ideal is catching the transition from backwardation to contango. Structure positions with higher vega sensitivity in the back month by selecting strikes where back month vega is 1.5-2x front month vega. Consider longer back month duration (50-60 DTE vs 40 DTE) for greater vega exposure. Exit when term structure reaches target contango level.
Portfolio-level management focuses on aggregate Greeks. Target delta neutrality at portfolio level (+/-5% of notional). Limit total negative gamma to an amount where a 2% underlying move produces acceptable P&L impact. Maintain positive theta sufficient to cover expected transaction costs plus target daily profit. Vega should align with your IV forecast - reduce if expecting IV crush. Rebalance when any Greek exceeds threshold rather than fixed time intervals.
Vol arb traders identify mispricings in the IV term structure relative to realized vol expectations. When front month IV is high relative to expected realized vol, sell calendars (sell back, buy front) to short vol. When back month IV is cheap relative to forward vol expectations, buy calendars. The key is having accurate realized vol forecasts. Professionals use statistical models (GARCH, HAR-RV) to forecast realized vol and compare against implied term structure for opportunities.
Correlation-adjusted sizing is essential. Calendars on the same underlying are highly correlated - treat XIU calendars at different strikes as 60-70% correlated. Index-versus-sector calendars (XIU vs the financials ETF XFN or a basket of bank options) are 70-80% correlated, since Canadian banks dominate the index. Calculate portfolio VaR including correlations. Limit single underlying exposure to 25% of total calendar capital. Limit total positive vega such that a 5-point VIX drop doesn't cause >10% portfolio loss. Stress test against 2008, 2020 and 2025-style vol regime changes.
Track and analyze: 1) Entry IV percentile - win rate by front and back IV percentile buckets, 2) Term structure slope at entry - win rate by IV differential, 3) Days held vs initial DTE - optimal exit timing, 4) Realized vs implied vol ratio during trade - edge source analysis, 5) Gamma-adjusted returns - are profits from theta or lucky price stability? After 50+ trades, identify which conditions produce statistical edge. Abandon variants without demonstrable edge despite favorable sample size.
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