Vega & Volatility Crush Plays

Intermediate Reading Time: 13 minutes Track: Greeks & Analytics

Vega is the Greek that separates casual options traders from sophisticated volatility specialists. While most traders focus on directional moves (delta), professional traders recognize that volatility is its own asset class that can be bought, sold, and profited from independently of price direction. Understanding vega and volatility crush is how traders turn upcoming earnings announcements, Fed meetings, and economic data releases into consistent profit opportunities.

Vega Essence: Vega measures how much an option's value changes when implied volatility changes by 1%. Both calls and puts have positive vega (they gain value when IV increases), making volatility itself the tradeable asset.

Vega In Depth: The Numbers Behind Volatility

Vega is quoted in dollars per 1% IV move. If an option has vega of 0.20, a 1% increase in implied volatility increases the option's value by $0.20 (per share). For a full contract (100 shares), that's a $20 gain just from volatility moving 1%.

Vega is not uniform: Different strikes and different expirations have different vega exposure. At-the-money (ATM) options have the highest vega per contract. Out-of-the-money options have moderate vega. Deep in-the-money or out-of-the-money options have minimal vega.

Time extends vega: A 90-day option typically has 3-4x the vega of a 30-day option with the same strike. This is because longer-dated options have more time for volatility to matter. LEAPS (options expiring in 1-2 years) have enormous vega exposure.

Vega Example: You buy a 60-day ATM call on Google (GOOGL) trading at $180. The option costs $4.50 with vega of 0.18. If IV increases from 30% to 32% (before the stock moves at all), your option is now worth approximately $4.86 (gain of $0.36, or $36 per contract). This profit came purely from volatility increasing.

Vega by Moneyness: A 45-day ATM call might have vega of 0.22. The same 45-day call 10% out-of-the-money might have vega of 0.15. The same call 10% in-the-money might have vega of 0.10. This is why volatility traders prefer ATM strikes—they maximize vega exposure.

Volatility Crush Around Earnings

This is the most predictable volatility event. Before earnings, implied volatility spikes as traders price in uncertainty. Earnings are supposed to create massive moves, so options get expensive. After the earnings announcement (whether the stock moves or not), that uncertainty is resolved and IV collapses—often 30-60% in a single day.

Real Earnings Volatility Crush: Consider Apple (AAPL) before earnings. One week before, IV is 22% (baseline). Three days before earnings, IV spikes to 32% as traders fear a big move. The 45-day ATM straddle that cost $3.40 with low IV is now worth $4.80 just from IV expansion (not from stock movement). After earnings are announced, IV crashes back to 23%. That same straddle is now worth $3.50. The stock barely moved, but anyone long options lost money to volatility crush. Conversely, anyone short options (sold a straddle) made money despite no directional move.

Why Crush Happens: Before earnings, option traders don't know what will happen, so they overpay for options (high IV). After earnings, the news is out. If AAPL beat estimates and guidance is strong, options might still be worth more (if the move was smaller than IV priced in). But if earnings met expectations exactly or missed, the "surprise" is gone and IV collapses. The crush is typically 30-60% and happens in minutes after the announcement.

Strategies to Profit from Volatility Crush

Short Straddle Before Earnings: Sell a 30-day ATM call and put just before earnings. Collect premium from elevated IV. After earnings, IV crashes and the options you sold are worth much less. You're profitable as long as the stock doesn't move beyond your breakeven points (which are set wide because you collected a lot of premium). Profit from both theta decay and vega crush.

Short Strangle (Cheaper Alternative): Instead of selling ATM, sell slightly OTM call and put. Collect less premium but require less directional risk. After volatility crush, both options are worth less and you profit.

Iron Condor: Sell a call spread (short higher call, long even higher call) and sell a put spread (short lower put, long even lower put). This defined-risk position profits from both volatility crush and any theta decay. Maximum profit if stock stays in the middle, but you're protected on the downside and upside.

Volatility Crush Risk: If the stock makes a HUGE move (worse-than-expected earnings or guidance), you can lose money despite the vega crush helping you. The volatility drop might not be enough to offset a 10%+ stock move. This is why traders use defined-risk structures like iron condors.

Strategies to Profit from Volatility Expansion

Long Options Before Volatility Events: Buy a straddle or strangle before major economic events (Fed meetings, jobs reports, FDA decisions) when you expect volatility to spike. If IV increases, you profit even if the stock doesn't move much. After the event, close the position.

Ratio Strategy: Buy slightly OTM calls or puts, sell nearer-the-money ones in higher quantity. If IV spikes and the stock moves moderately, your long options gain more than your short ones lose.

Volatility Expansion Play: You believe the Fed will surprise markets with an aggressive rate hike in 2 days. S&P 500 IV is currently 16%. You buy a 30-day ATM straddle, paying $2.80 with vega of 0.25. If IV spikes to 22% on the Fed announcement, your straddle is now worth ~$4.30 (gain of $1.50 just from vega). Even if the index barely moved directionally, you profit from the volatility spike. Close the position the day of the announcement, before theta starts eroding value.

Vega Risk in Large Portfolios

A portfolio with net positive vega gains when IV increases market-wide and loses when IV crashes. This matters because volatility spikes are often correlated with stock declines. During market downturns, VIX spikes and options become more valuable. Hedges (long put options) become much more valuable when you need them.

A portfolio manager might:

1. Track net portfolio vega daily

2. Adjust vega exposure based on expected volatility changes

3. Use vega to complement or hedge directional exposure

4. Monitor vega concentration (is all vega in 1-2 stocks or well-diversified?)

Negative Vega Risk: A short seller or income investor with many short call positions has massive negative vega. If IV spikes 10%, their underwater position costs them dearly. During stock market crashes, IV often spikes, making short premium positions dangerous.

Real Earnings Examples: Before and After Crush

Company IV Before IV After Earnings Stock Move Trader Outcome (Short Straddle)
MSFT (Microsoft) 28% 18% +2.5% Profit (crush > move)
NVDA (NVIDIA) 35% 22% +8.0% Loss (move > crush benefit)
AMZN (Amazon) 24% 16% +1.2% Profit (strong crush)
NFLX (Netflix) 32% 26% -5.5% Loss (directional move too large)

Notice that NVIDIA and Netflix traders lost money shorting straddles even though volatility crushed. This is because the stock moves were larger than the vega crush benefit. This is why experienced traders define their risk with spreads or use tighter hedge ratios.

Volatility Crush vs. Realized Move

Professional traders distinguish between these two forces:

Expected Move: What the market prices in via IV. A 30% IV with 30 days to earnings prices in a ~2.5% expected move (rough approximation: move ≈ IV × sqrt(days/365)).

Actual Move: What really happens. If earnings beat badly, the stock might move 8%—much more than the 2.5% IV priced in.

Volatility Crush: How much IV falls. Even if the actual move was large, if IV falls from 35% to 20%, the crush helps short-vega traders.

The best earnings trades happen when you predict the interaction correctly. Short straddles work best when: (1) IV is elevated (good premium collected), (2) you expect the actual move to be smaller than IV priced in, (3) IV crushes after earnings.

Fed Meetings and Macro Volatility Events

Fed meetings follow similar patterns to earnings. Weeks before, IV gradually rises. The week of the decision, IV spikes (especially if a rate hike or pause is expected). After the announcement, IV crushes. Traders profit by shorting vega into the meeting or buying straddles if they expect a surprising outcome that extends volatility.

Major macro events include:

- Federal Reserve decisions

- Monthly jobs reports

- CPI and inflation data

- GDP releases

- Options expiration dates

Each creates volatility spikes that traders can systematically profit from.

Summary

Vega is your window into trading volatility as an independent asset. Volatility crush around earnings is one of the most reliable patterns in markets—IV spikes before earnings, crushes after. By understanding when to short vega (earnings, quiet periods) and when to buy vega (before economic surprises), traders create consistent profit opportunities. The key is recognizing that stock price, volatility, and time are three independent dimensions you can trade. Expert traders exploit this by treating volatility as its own tradeable dimension, separate from directional prediction.

Lesson Quiz

1. What does vega measure?
2. What typically happens to IV (implied volatility) immediately after a company reports earnings?
3. If you sell a short straddle before earnings expecting volatility crush, what must be true for you to profit?
4. Which option type has the highest vega?
5. What is a key risk of selling short straddles around earnings?