Options Chart

IV Skew

Volatility

How the market prices fear — and where it expects the risk to come from

IV Skew plots implied volatility across all strike prices. In a normal market, out-of-the-money puts are more expensive (carry higher IV) than equivalent OTM calls — because markets fall faster than they rise. This creates the characteristic downward slope called the 'volatility smirk.' The shape and steepness of this curve reveals the market's asymmetric fear.

Why the Smirk Exists

IV Skew is the market's fear fingerprint. It shows you not just how scared people are, but which direction they're scared of.

In a perfectly efficient market with lognormal returns, IV would be flat across all strikes — every option would carry the same implied volatility. But markets crash faster than they rally, and large institutions continuously buy downside protection to hedge their equity portfolios. This structural put-buying demand creates persistent excess IV in out-of-the-money puts — the volatility smirk.

The smirk is therefore not a mispricing to be arbitraged — it is a fair reflection of the asymmetric risk in equities. Understanding when the smirk is steeper or flatter than usual is where the edge lives.

Reading relative richness

The absolute level of IV matters less than how it compares to its recent history. A 25-delta put at 30 IV is cheap if the stock typically trades at 40 IV. The same option at 30 IV is expensive if the stock has been calm and realized only 15 IV. Always compare current skew to its historical range before buying or selling.

Steep Skew vs. Flat Skew

A steep downside skew — where OTM puts carry significantly higher IV than ATM options — indicates the market is pricing a large probability of a sharp downside move. This environment is hostile for put buyers (premiums are rich) but favorable for put spreads, where you buy the put you want and sell a cheaper one below to reduce cost.

A flat or inverted skew is rare and valuable information. Flat skew after a vol spike means fear has normalized and options are cheap across the board — a good entry for long premium strategies. Inverted skew (calls more expensive than puts) signals a short squeeze or buyout rumor — someone is paying up for upside exposure, and the market is pricing that possibility into call IVs.

Skew Around Events

Before earnings, FDA decisions, or major macro events, the skew shape often changes dramatically. IV rises sharply in the event expiry while other expiries stay relatively flat, creating a "term structure kink." This is the market pricing the binary event risk. After the event, that expiry's IV collapses while the rest of the curve normalizes — this IV crush is the defining risk for event options buyers.

How to read it

1
Start here Steep downside skew

Market fears a crash — put protection is expensive, sellers charge a big risk premium

2
Flat skew

Symmetric expectations — rare, usually right after a major vol event resolves

3
Inverted skew (calls > puts)

Market fears an upside squeeze — suggests M&A rumor, short squeeze, or event play

Key takeaway High overall IV level

All options are expensive right now — premium-selling strategies pay better here