What is Implied Volatility?
Implied Volatility (IV) is the market's forward-looking expectation of price movement embedded in an option's price. Unlike historical volatility (which looks backward), IV looks forward — it's what options buyers and sellers collectively believe will happen.
Key relationship: Higher IV = More expensive options = Higher premium. Lower IV = Cheaper options = Lower premium.
The STOCKAN IV Heatmap visualizes IV across the entire options matrix — every strike, every expiry — so you can instantly identify where volatility is cheap or expensive.
The Volatility Surface
The "volatility surface" is a 3D representation of IV:
- X-axis: Strike prices (OTM puts → ATM → OTM calls)
- Y-axis: Time to expiry (near-term → long-dated)
- Z-axis: Implied Volatility percentage
In a "normal" market, the volatility surface shows the volatility smile — OTM puts have higher IV than OTM calls (tail risk premium), and near-term options have different IV than far-dated ones.
Reading the IV Heatmap
Color Coding
- Deep Red: Very high IV (> 90th historical percentile) — expensive options
- Orange: Elevated IV (70th-90th percentile)
- Yellow: Normal IV range (30th-70th percentile)
- Light Green: Low IV (10th-30th percentile)
- Deep Green: Very low IV (< 10th percentile) — cheap options
What to Look For
IV Skew Analysis: If OTM puts have much higher IV than OTM calls (steep negative skew), it signals:
- Strong demand for downside protection
- Market participants are more worried about crashes than rallies
- Protective put buyers are willing to pay premium
IV Smile: When both OTM puts AND OTM calls have higher IV than ATM (smile shape):
- Market expects large moves in either direction
- Common before major events (Budget, RBI, elections)
Inverted Skew: Rare case where OTM calls have higher IV than puts:
- Strong bullish momentum, call buying pressure
- Often seen in stocks with takeover rumor or sector tailwinds
Trading Applications
Application 1: Selling Overpriced IV
When IV Rank (IVR) > 60% — meaning current IV is in the top 40% of its 1-year range:
- Consider selling premium strategies: short strangles, iron condors, credit spreads
- Options are statistically expensive → mean reversion toward lower IV favors sellers
Application 2: Buying Underpriced IV
When IVR < 20% — IV is historically cheap:
- Long straddles or long strangles become attractive
- Debit spreads offer good risk/reward
- Pre-event positioning (buy cheap IV before expected catalyst)
Application 3: Term Structure Trading
Compare IV between weekly and monthly expiry at the same strike:
If monthly IV >> weekly IV: Calendar spread opportunity (sell expensive monthly, buy weekly) If weekly IV >> monthly IV (IV inversion): Market expecting near-term event; exercise caution selling near-term options
India VIX and IV Relationship
India VIX is a measure of the expected 30-day volatility of NIFTY, derived from option prices. It's the benchmark against which individual option IVs are measured.
VIX regimes for NIFTY options traders:
| VIX Range | Options Market Condition | Recommended Bias |
|---|---|---|
| Below 11 | Very low volatility | Buyers get good deals |
| 11-14 | Normal | Balanced approach |
| 14-18 | Elevated | Sellers have edge |
| 18-22 | High fear | Look for selling opportunities post-spike |
| Above 22 | Extreme fear | Contrarian buying of index |
IV Percentile vs IV Rank
The heatmap offers two modes:
IV Percentile: Where current IV sits relative to all historical readings (0-100%). Percentile 80 = current IV is higher than 80% of all past readings.
IV Rank (IVR): (Current IV - 52w Low) / (52w High - 52w Low). IVR 100% means IV is at its 52-week high. IVR 0% means it's at its 52-week low.
Both are useful — IVR is more sensitive to recent extremes, while IV Percentile is a longer-horizon measure.
Data Notes
IV is calculated using Black-Scholes model from live NSE option prices. Data refreshes every 30 seconds during market hours. Historical IV data maintained for 252 trading days (1 year) per strike per expiry.