Use cases
Four concrete decisions, fully modelled with live box rate and full tax logic.
Articles
Deep-dives on tax, risk, and comparison with other financing.
Learn · 10 min read
A box spread, end to end
This page assumes nothing. By the end you will know what a box spread is, why short-selling one is equivalent to borrowing money, and why the implied rate is competitive with bank lending.
Each chapter shows a worked example. Toggle Conceptual at the top if you want the prose only.
01 · What is an option?
An option is a contract giving the holder the right — not the obligation — to buy (a call) or sell (a put) an underlying asset at a fixed strike price on a fixed expiry date. The holder pays a premium upfront; the seller collects it.
European-style options (the kind used in box spreads) can only be exercised at expiry, never before. SPX and ESTX50 options are both European-style — that's why the box's payoff is deterministic.
02 · Long vs short
Every option has a buyer and a seller. The buyer is long, the seller is short. The seller's P&L is exactly the buyer's P&L flipped. In a box spread you are long two legs and short two legs — the directional exposures cancel.
03 · Two legs make a spread
A vertical spread combines two options of the same type at different strikes:
- Bull call spread — buy a call at K1, sell a call at K2 (K2 > K1). Bounded payoff between 0 and
K2 − K1. - Bear put spread — buy a put at K2, sell a put at K1. Same bounded shape, mirrored.
Both spreads cap your upside and your downside. That bounded structure is what we'll exploit to manufacture a synthetic loan.
04 · Four legs make a box
Combine the bull call spread and the bear put spread on the same expiry and same strike pair. That's four legs:
| Action | Right | Strike | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| BUY | CALL | K1 (lower) | Bull Call |
| SELL | CALL | K2 (upper) | Bull Call |
| BUY | PUT | K2 (upper) | Bear Put |
| SELL | PUT | K1 (lower) | Bear Put |
This is a long box. Reverse every action and you have a short box, which is what we use to borrow.
05 · The payoff is flat
At expiry the long box settles to exactly K2 − K1 — regardless of where the underlying ends up. The bull call leg and the bear put leg combine so that any move in the underlying cancels out. The payoff line is horizontal.
This is the magic. The box has zero market exposure. Its only "input" is the time value of money between today and expiry.
| ST | Call leg | Put leg | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4400 | 0 | 200 | €2,000 |
| 4500 | 0 | 200 | €2,000 |
| 4600 | 100 | 100 | €2,000 |
| 4800 | 200 | 0 | €2,000 |
06 · Shorting the box is borrowing
If the long box pays (K2 − K1) × multiplier at expiry no matter what, then shorting it means:
- You receive a credit today (call it P).
- You owe
(K2 − K1) × multiplierat expiry.
That's a zero-coupon loan. The implied annual rate is whatever discount makes P equal to the present value of the at-expiry settlement. The market sets P; you get whatever rate falls out.
07 · Why the rate is competitive
Box spreads price near the risk-free rate because:
- The cash flows are deterministic — there's no credit risk in the legs themselves.
- The exchange is the central counterparty (CBOE for SPX, Eurex for ESTX50). No bilateral default risk.
- Liquidity providers arbitrage any gap between the box's implied rate and short-term rates.
Result: SPX boxes trade close to SOFR, ESTX50 boxes close to €STR. Compare that to a Lombard line at Euribor + 3% and the savings show up immediately.
08 · Where the risk lives
R.1 · Margin buffer
Box-spread cash flows are deterministic at expiry, but the legs themselves are still option positions. From the broker's point of view you carry four open contracts — two short — and they can move against you intraday. So the broker holds initial margin at fill and a (lower) maintenance margin for as long as the box is open.
How that margin is sized depends on the regime:
- Reg-T accounts charge naked-short-option margin for the short legs and effectively ignore that the long legs offset them — punitive and rarely worth the trade. If your account is Reg-T, switch to portfolio margin first.
- Portfolio margin stress-tests the whole book through ±15% (equities) or ±6% (broad index) shocks. A box collapses to its width × multiplier under any stress, so the haircut is small and bounded — typically
20–30% × width × multiplierper contract. That's the regime to use. - SPAN / Eurex margining behaves similarly: it nets the four legs and charges a small premium-margin slice. ESTX50 box margin per contract is usually
€400–600at 200-wide.
The number can move during the trade. Volatility spikes raise the stress shock; rate jumps revalue the legs and shift collateral requirements; an exchange-wide haircut bump (e.g. 2020 March) instantly tightens everyone's books. Keep at least 50% headroom above the stated requirement, and don't run boxes against margin you'd otherwise need for your equity positions — a forced equity sale to plug a margin call defeats the savings.
Practical rules of thumb:
- Compute box margin =
haircut% × width × multiplier × contracts. For a 1000-wide SPX box × 1 contract under PM ≈$2,000–3,000margin. - Reserve
1.5×that as headroom against haircut tightening. - If the broker's portfolio-margin agreement is contingent on net liquidation value above a threshold (e.g. IBKR's $110K minimum), don't let a market drawdown push you below — you'd flip back to Reg-T overnight and the box's margin would jump several-fold.
R.2 · Counterparty chain
You face the exchange's clearing house, not a single bank. Default risk concentrated at CBOE / Eurex level — historically rock solid, but not zero.
R.3 · Early unwind
The box's nice flat payoff only crystallises at expiry. Closing early means buying back four legs at whatever the market quotes — usually fine, but mid-tenor the implied rate can drift.
09 · Tax treatment in DE
The box's pre-tax carrying cost (paid at expiry) is a Termingeschäft loss under §20 EStG and offsets capital gains via the Abgeltungsteuer (26.375% incl. Solidaritätszuschlag).
Effective after-tax cost ≈ pre-tax cost × (1 − 0.26375) when you have offsetable Kapitalerträge. No offsetable gains? You pay full pre-tax. Talk to a tax adviser before relying on the offset.
That's the whole picture. Now go run a number through the calculator on the home page.