Diagonal Spread: Combining Direction and Time Decay
How to Set Up a Diagonal Spread
The most common version is the call diagonal (bullish) or put diagonal (bearish).
| Leg | Action | Strike | Expiration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leg 1 (Short) | Sell 1 call (or put) | OTM — near current price or higher | Near-term (e.g., 30 DTE) |
| Leg 2 (Long) | Buy 1 call (or put) | Lower strike (deeper ITM or ATM) | Longer-term (e.g., 60–90 DTE) |
The trade typically costs a net debit. Your long option provides the directional exposure while the short option generates income through theta decay.
Why Diagonals Are Powerful
A diagonal spread is essentially a covered call built with options instead of stock. The long-dated, deeper-in-the-money call acts as a stock substitute (high delta, lower cost than 100 shares), and the short-dated OTM call acts as the covered call sold against it.
This structure gives you three potential profit sources: directional appreciation of the long option, theta decay of the short option, and potential IV expansion of the long option. It’s one of the few strategies where you can benefit from time passage and a directional move simultaneously.
Diagonal Spread vs. Calendar Spread vs. Vertical Spread
| Factor | Diagonal Spread | Calendar Spread |
|---|---|---|
| Strikes | Different | Same |
| Expirations | Different | Different |
| Directional Bias | Yes — bullish or bearish | Neutral (at the money) |
| Theta Profile | Positive (net) | Positive (net) |
| Vega Profile | Positive (net) | Positive (net) |
| Delta | Non-zero — directional | Near zero at the money |
| Flexibility | Higher — can roll short leg repeatedly | Moderate |
Example: Bullish Call Diagonal
Stock XYZ is at $100. You’re moderately bullish over the next 60 days.
Buy the $95 call expiring in 60 days for $8.00 (deep ITM, ~0.75 delta). Sell the $105 call expiring in 30 days for $2.00 (OTM).
Net debit = $6.00 per share ($600 per contract). If XYZ stays between $100–$105 over the next 30 days, the short call decays toward zero while the long call retains most of its value. You can then sell another 30-day call against the remaining long option — effectively running a “poor man’s covered call.”
Rolling the Short Leg
One of the diagonal’s biggest advantages is the ability to roll the short option after it expires or decays. When the near-term call expires worthless (or you close it for a small amount), you sell a new near-term call against the same long option. This generates additional income and can be repeated multiple times over the life of the long option.
Each roll effectively reduces your cost basis. After 2–3 successful rolls, you may have recovered most or all of the original debit — turning the trade into a nearly risk-free position.
Risks to Manage
Stock surges past the short strike. If XYZ rockets to $115, your short call is deep in the money and you’re capped on profit between the strikes. The long option gains value but not as much as the stock move. Early assignment risk exists on the short call if it goes deep ITM.
Stock drops sharply. If XYZ falls well below your long strike, both options lose value. The short call’s premium helps cushion the loss, but you still have downside exposure on the long option.
IV collapse. Since the long option has more vega, a drop in implied volatility hurts the position. This is the same vega risk as calendar spreads.
Key Takeaways
- Diagonal spreads use different strikes AND different expirations, combining directional exposure with theta income.
- They function like a “poor man’s covered call” — buying a long-dated deep-ITM option and selling short-dated OTM options against it.
- Rolling the short leg multiple times can reduce cost basis to near zero over the life of the long option.
- Positive theta and vega make them ideal for moderately bullish views in low-IV environments.
- Risks include sharp moves past the short strike (capping profits) and IV collapse reducing the long option’s value.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a diagonal spread?
A diagonal spread is an options strategy that uses two options with different strike prices and different expiration dates. It combines elements of vertical spreads (direction) and calendar spreads (time decay).
What is a poor man’s covered call?
A poor man’s covered call (PMCC) is a bullish diagonal spread where you buy a deep-ITM long-dated call as a stock substitute and sell short-dated OTM calls against it. It replicates covered call income at much lower capital outlay.
How much capital does a diagonal spread require?
Significantly less than a covered call. A PMCC might cost $600–$1,200 per contract (the cost of the deep-ITM LEAPS call minus the short call premium), compared to $5,000–$15,000+ to buy 100 shares for a traditional covered call.
Can I roll the short leg of a diagonal spread?
Yes — this is one of the strategy’s key advantages. After the short option expires or decays, you sell a new short-term option against the same long option. Each roll generates additional premium income.
What happens if the stock drops in a diagonal spread?
Both options lose value, but the short call’s premium provides some cushion. If the stock drops significantly below the long strike, the position shows a loss limited to the net debit paid (minus any premium collected from the short call).