Quote from spindr0:
Not true. With a calendar you are looking for expiration at/near the strike. After the near term leg is covered cheaply or expires, then you want the directional move. Any sizeable directional move in either direction that heads OTM is NOT good for calendars.
Quote from thebubs:
Right but with the calender put your direction is further down (if your right), it is a bearish bet right? where as a calender call is short term bearish, long term bullish (if you right)- thats my thinking
So today you believe/know that the underlying will be down for a month to the strike by September expiration and then up after expiration? Impressive!Quote from thebubs:
Right but with the calender put your direction is further down (if your right), it is a bearish bet right? where as a calender call is short term bearish, long term bullish (if you right)- thats my thinking
They're the same.Quote from mike007:
Does an OTM decay faster than an ITM? Yes or no?
Quote from spindr0:
So today you believe/know that the underlying will be down for a month to the strike by September expiration and then up after expiration? Impressive!
I'm with MTE in that both calendars are bearish and when you cover the short leg (or it expires), it becomes a new trade.
In addition, doing the ITM calendar has 2 potentail drawbacks. The slippage will tend to be larger and you'll also have the possibility of early assignment if the underlying rises and the short leg gets near parity.

Quote from ramaTrade:
Calendar is one of my favorites, it gives me the freedom to cover the near term leg if conditions permit.
Close the near terms once their values drops signifcantly.