Implied Volatility in Options Trading: From Beginner to Mastery

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In Options trading, there is a concept that directly affects your profits and losses—Implied Volatility (IV). Many Newbies have only a vague understanding of it, which leads to frequent pitfalls. Today, we will break this down from scratch.

What is Implied Volatility?

In simple terms, implied volatility is the market's expectation of the future price fluctuation. It reflects not historical data, but the current market sentiment.

Let's benchmark:

  • Historical Volatility (HV) = What has happened in the past (retrospective lens)
  • Implied Volatility (IV) = What the market thinks will happen next (crystal ball)

Both indicators are expressed as annualized percentages.

Why is IV so important?

Options price = Intrinsic value + Time value

Only the time value is affected by IV. The higher the IV, the more expensive the Options premium; the lower the IV, the cheaper the Options.

Using vega to measure: For every 1% change in IV, the options price will change accordingly.

For example

Assuming you are optimistic about BTC and bought a BTC call Options:

  • Current BTC price: 20,000 USDT
  • Strike Price: 25,000 USDT

The greater the price fluctuation, the higher the probability of BTC breaking through 25,000, making your Options more valuable. Conversely, if the market is very calm, the probability of exercising the option is low, and your contract depreciates.

Key logic:

  • People who buy Options → Hope for high Volatility (bet on Fluctuation)
  • The person selling Options → hopes for low Volatility (selling stability)

How does IV change over time?

The longer the remaining time, the greater the impact of IV. Because a longer time means more possibilities and greater uncertainty.

As the expiration approaches, the effect of IV diminishes. Because the price trend is basically determined, uncertainty is low.

Volatility Smile

IV is not the same for all strike prices. It usually presents a U shape:

  • At-the-Money Options (ATM) → Lowest IV
  • Out of the Money Options (OTM) → Higher IV
  • The further it deviates from parity → the higher the IV

Why is this happening?

  1. Risk Compensation: Out-of-the-money options carry higher risk, and sellers demand a higher IV premium.
  2. Black Swan Hedge: Market worries about extreme Volatility will push up the IV of long-dated Options.

Additionally, the closer the expiration date of the Options, the steeper the smile curve; the further the expiration date, the flatter the curve.

How to determine if IV is high or low?

Compare Historical Volatility (HV):

  • IV > HV → The market pricing is relatively high, and the options are overvalued.

    • Strategy: Shorting Volatility (Short Vega), such as a reverse straddle Options
  • IV < HV → Market pricing is low, Options are undervalued

    • Strategy: Long Volatility (Long Vega), for example, a long straddle Options.

Calculation skills: Compare the 20-day HV and 60-day HV to see if the IV is relatively reasonable. If the IV significantly deviates from these two values, it indicates that the market pricing may be biased.

Overview of Common Options Strategies

Strategy Volatility Sensitivity Directional
Call Option Long Bullish
Bullish put Short Bullish
Put Call Short Bearish
Put option Short selling Bearish
Long Straddle Long Neutral
Reverse Straddle Short Neutral
Iron Eagle Unfold Short Neutral

Practical Recommendations

  1. Place an order in IV mode on Gate Content Square, automatically priced based on implied volatility.
  2. Dynamic Hedge Delta, maintain neutral positions, focus on Volatility returns
  3. Pay attention to historical volatility turning points, this is a golden signal for overestimation/underestimation of IV.
  4. Use professional tools to track Delta changes and avoid uncontrolled risk.

Summary

IV is the soul indicator of Options trading. Simply put: The tighter the market (high IV), the more expensive the Options; the calmer the market (low IV), the cheaper the Options. Smart traders find mispriced Options by comparing IV and HV, profiting from the Volatility spread.

Next time you look at Options prices, don't just focus on the absolute numbers; learn to understand the market sentiment behind IV.

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This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
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