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IV

Implied Volatility

The market's forward-looking expectation of future price volatility — the single most important factor in option pricing.

What Is Implied Volatility?

Implied Volatility (IV) is the market's consensus estimate of how much an underlying asset will move over a specific period. Unlike historical volatility which looks at past price data, IV is forward-looking — it is "implied" or backed out from the current market price of an option using an option pricing model like Black-Scholes.

When you see a Nifty 24500 CE trading at ₹180, that price embeds the market's expectation of future Nifty movement. Using the Black-Scholes model with known inputs (spot price, strike, time to expiry, risk-free rate), you solve for the one unknown — volatility. That solved value is the Implied Volatility.

IV is expressed as an annualized percentage. An IV of 18% means the market expects the underlying to move roughly 18% over the next year. To convert to a shorter period: multiply by √(days/365). For a weekly Nifty option with IV of 18%: expected move = 18% x √(7/365) x 24,500 = ±610 points over the week.

IV is arguably the most critical concept for options traders. Two options with identical strike, expiry, and underlying can trade at vastly different prices solely because of different IV levels. Understanding IV gives you a massive edge in determining whether an option is "cheap" or "expensive."

IV vs Historical Volatility

Implied Volatility (IV)

  • Forward-looking: what the market expects will happen
  • Derived from current option prices in the market
  • Changes in real-time as supply/demand for options shifts
  • Increases before events (earnings, budget, elections)
  • Reflects fear, uncertainty, and positioning
  • Directly determines option premium — higher IV = higher premium

Historical Volatility (HV)

  • Backward-looking: what actually happened in the past
  • Calculated from historical closing prices using standard deviation
  • Updates daily as new price data comes in
  • Reflects realized past movement of the underlying
  • Useful as a benchmark to judge if IV is high or low
  • Does not directly affect option prices — it is an output, not an input

The difference between IV and HV is called the Volatility Risk Premium. Historically, IV is almost always higher than subsequent realized volatility, meaning option sellers earn this premium over time. In Indian markets, this premium averages 2-4 percentage points for Nifty options.

How IV Affects Option Premium

IV is the primary driver of the time value component of an option's premium. When IV rises, both calls and puts become more expensive. When IV falls, both become cheaper. This effect is captured by the Greek called Vega.

Nifty ATM Option Premium at Different IV Levels

Nifty Spot: 24,500 | Strike: 24,500 CE | Days to expiry: 7

IV = 10%: Premium = ₹95

IV = 15%: Premium = ₹142

IV = 20%: Premium = ₹190

IV = 25%: Premium = ₹237

IV = 35%: Premium = ₹332

Notice: a 5% increase in IV adds roughly ₹47-50 to the ATM premium. This is why buying options before an event (when IV is inflated) often leads to losses even when your direction is correct.

IV Before & After Events

Events are the primary catalyst for IV expansion and contraction. Understanding the IV cycle around events is essential for avoiding costly mistakes and finding profitable opportunities.

Earnings Season

Stock IV rises 30-80% in the week before results. Reliance, TCS, HDFC Bank options see IV spike from 25% to 40%+ pre-results. The day after results, IV collapses by 20-50%, crushing option buyers who were right on direction but bought inflated premiums.

Union Budget

Nifty IV starts rising 5-7 days before Budget. On Budget morning, Nifty ATM IV typically reaches 18-25%. Post-Budget, IV can crash 30-40% within hours. The best strategy is selling options after the Budget speech begins, as the event is now "known."

RBI Policy

IV build-up is moderate (10-20% increase) before RBI meetings. Impact depends on surprise factor. A rate cut when consensus expected a hold causes large moves but also rapid IV decay as the uncertainty resolves.

Elections

The biggest IV events. In 2024, Nifty IV rose from 12 to 26 over 3 weeks before election results. Post-results, IV crashed from 31 to 14 in 10 trading days. Option premiums were 2-3x normal levels during the event window.

The IV Crush Phenomenon

IV Crush is the rapid decline in implied volatility after an anticipated event passes. It is the single most common way retail option buyers lose money, even when they correctly predict direction. The event removes uncertainty, and option premiums deflate immediately.

Detailed Nifty IV Crush Example — Budget Day

Day Before Budget: Nifty at 24,500. You are bullish and buy 1 lot of Nifty 24,500 CE at ₹280 (IV = 22%).

Budget Day: Government announces growth-friendly policies. Nifty rallies 200 points to 24,700. You expect big profits.

Reality: IV crashes from 22% to 13% post-Budget. Your 24,500 CE is now ITM by 200 points, but the premium is only ₹240.

Your P&L: Bought at ₹280, now worth ₹240 = LOSS of ₹40 per unit = ₹1,000 loss per lot.

You were right on direction (+200 points) but lost money because IV crush destroyed more value than the directional gain added. The 200-point intrinsic value gain was offset by ₹240 of time value evaporation from IV crush.

Better approach: Sell a short strangle or iron condor before Budget to profit from the IV crush. Or buy a debit spread which partially hedges IV crush because you are both long and short IV.

IV Percentile vs IV Rank

Raw IV numbers are meaningless without context. Nifty IV of 18% — is that high or low? You need a framework to compare current IV against its own history. Two popular metrics solve this problem.

IV Percentile

  • Measures: what percentage of days over the past year had IV lower than today's IV
  • Formula: (Number of days IV was lower / Total trading days) x 100
  • IV Percentile of 80% means today's IV is higher than 80% of all days in the past year
  • Better for most traders because it accounts for the distribution of IV values
  • Less distorted by one-off extreme spikes

IV Rank

  • Measures: where current IV sits between the 52-week high and low
  • Formula: (Current IV - 52wk Low) / (52wk High - 52wk Low) x 100
  • IV Rank of 50% means IV is exactly halfway between its yearly high and low
  • Simpler to calculate and understand
  • Can be distorted by outlier spikes — a single VIX spike to 40 compresses the rank for months

Reading IV from the Option Chain

Every option on the NSE option chain has its own IV. ATM options have the most representative IV, while OTM options often show higher IV due to skew. Here is how to read and interpret IV from the chain.

ATM IV

The best single measure of overall implied volatility. Look at the strike nearest to the current spot price. Nifty ATM IV of 14% during calm markets and 20%+ during events is typical. This is what most platforms show as "IV" on their dashboard.

OTM Put IV

Usually higher than ATM IV due to demand for crash protection (skew). If ATM IV is 15% but 500-point OTM put IV is 20%, there is significant skew — traders are paying up for downside protection.

OTM Call IV

Generally lower than ATM or OTM put IV. High OTM call IV suggests speculative buying or short squeeze expectations. In Bank Nifty, OTM call IV can spike before results of major bank earnings.

IV Across Expiries

Near-term expiries often have lower IV than far-term in calm markets (contango). Before events, near-term IV spikes above far-term (backwardation). Comparing IV across expiries reveals the term structure and event pricing.

The IV Surface Concept

When you plot IV across all strikes (x-axis) and all expiries (y-axis), you get a three-dimensional surface called the Implied Volatility Surface. This surface captures the full picture of how the market prices uncertainty across strike prices and time.

Why the IV Surface Matters

The IV surface reveals mispricing opportunities. If one region of the surface is unusually elevated relative to neighboring regions, you can construct trades that profit from normalization. For example, if 3-week expiry IV is 16% while 4-week expiry IV is 12%, a calendar spread selling the 3-week and buying the 4-week captures this anomaly.

Key Features of the Nifty IV Surface

OTM puts always have higher IV than OTM calls (skew). Near-term options show more IV variation than far-term (term structure). Event expiries (Budget week, RBI week) show elevated IV bumps. The surface flattens in very low VIX environments and becomes steep during panics.

Common Misconceptions

"High IV means the stock will move a lot"

High IV means the market expects a large move, but expectations can be wrong. After many earnings announcements, the actual move is smaller than what IV implied. This is precisely why option sellers profit from high IV — they sell the expectation and pocket the difference. High IV = expensive options, not guaranteed big moves.

"I should always buy options when IV is low"

Low IV can stay low for extended periods. Buying straddles in a low-IV environment works only if IV actually rises or the underlying makes a significant move. If Nifty stays range-bound, low IV will eat your premium through Theta decay. Low IV is a necessary but not sufficient condition for buying options.

"IV crush only happens after earnings"

IV crush occurs after any binary event — Budget, elections, RBI policy, court verdicts, SEBI regulations, and even weekly expiry. Any event that resolves uncertainty causes IV to drop. Identify all upcoming binary events, not just earnings.

"Higher IV always benefits option sellers"

Selling options in high IV is only profitable if the actual move is smaller than what IV predicted. During COVID, IV was 80% and selling options lost money because Nifty moved more than IV implied. Sell in high IV with proper hedging and stop losses. Never sell naked options in panic markets.

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