HomeNewsTrendsExpert ColumnsFind out when Implied Volatility is high or low to trade options profitably

Find out when Implied Volatility is high or low to trade options profitably

Best way to deal with extremes in IVs is by instantly applying a Trailing Stop Loss mechanism to trading and start locking profits as soon as they are in sight.

June 27, 2020 / 13:08 IST
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Shubham Agarwal

Implied Volatility is no more a black box term for most of our options traders now. Still, let us begin with a basic definition of it. Option Premium (Call/Put) is made up for five variables viz. Underlying Price, Strike Price, Time to Expiry, Interest Rate & Volatility. Now with first four of the five factors being publicly available information, there would be no debate on its input value.

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Last but not the least the Volatility figure could be debated over. So, instead of debating over it given the option premium which is a market derived price we calculate this figure by back calculating the Volatility for the given premium by feeding in the rest of the four known variables.

This volatility is not the volatility of the stock derived from its historical returns, it is Implied from the premium hence, we name it Implied Volatility. Apart from being a Back Calculated figure there is one more element which sets Implied Volatility apart from Historical Volatility.