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This post will teach you how to properly trade the Earnings IV Ramp and the common mistakes most traders make.
As a company approaches their earnings event, we usually see an increase in the implied volatility for their options. Now normally, when you buy an option and implied volatility increases you make money. This is because when you buy an option you are long vega, meaning you make money if there is a change in implied volatility to the upside. Because of this, a strategy has gained popularity in the retail space trading the "IV Ramp" into earnings.What is the IV Ramp?
The IV Ramp is a phenomenon that we witness before a large event. Implied volatility increases until the day of the event and then it falls off the cliff once the event is over. This is because investors are hedging their risk and traders are taking speculative bets before the news is released. This drives up the price of the options before the event. As we can see Facebook (FB) moves about +/- 5% the day after they release their earnings. Most of a stock’s annual return is largely due to how well or poorly they do on the earnings day every quarter. https://preview.redd.it/xh33bx4859u71.png?width=1184&format=png&auto=webp&s=e79cf6be58c2ce244400fa15e2e2a5698d7932c1Can we make money trading the IV Ramp?
One of the questions traders have is, can we buy options a few days or weeks before the earnings event and witness an increase in options prices due to the rise of implied volatility? As always, the answer is Yes and No. There is some good research on this topic however the research is mostly overshadowed by “trading salesmen” who claim it to be an easy money trade.What really is the IV Ramp?
If we want to determine if the IV ramp is something we can trade, we first need to really understand what it is. Remember, what we are trading here is volatility. First we need to start by identifying a few different types of volatility that we will speak about.1) The three types of volatility around earnings:
Imagine we are looking at an option that has an earnings event in the middle of it. We can split up the option into 3 parts.- Ambient Volatility – This is the volatility the stock will realize going into the event. For example, If FB has its earnings release in 5 days and we are looking at a 10 day option, the ambient volatility will be the volatility over the next 4 days as we get closer to the event.
- Diffuse Volatility – This is the volatility we see from the day after the event to the day of the options expiration. So if the earnings date is in 5 days and our option expires in 10 days, the diffuse vol would be the volatility from day 6-10.
- Event Volatility – This is the volatility associated with the earnings event. If the earnings date is 5 days from now, the volatility on day 5 (how much the market is implying the stock to move on earnings) is the event volatility. This is what we are trying to trade.
2) Volatility is synthetic time.
This means that an increase in volatility is the same as increasing the time to expiration of an option. For example: The price of a call option with 20 days to expiration and a volatility of 30% might have a price of $5, however, the same strike call option with 30 days to expiration and a volatility of 25% may also be $5. In this example, we increased time but decreased volatility causing the option to keep its exact value. Time increases option value because higher chance of option being ITM, and volatility does the same thing. Therefore we say volatility is synthetic time.Now that we know this, imagine a situation where facebook has an earnings announcement in 5 days.
The event volatility is 100% and the ambient volatility (volatility before the event) is 25%. Below is the daily IV that is priced into our option.- Day 1 -> 25% IV
- Day 2 -> 25% IV
- Day 3 -> 25% IV
- Day 4 -> 25% IV
- Day 5 -> 100% IV (Earnings Date).
Now let’s see what happens to implied volatility as we get closer to the earnings date:
As we hold this option, time passes. We go from being on day 1, to being on day 2. The conveyor belt has moved forward and the front box (day 1) has fallen off. There are now 4 boxes on the belt. Now this option sees 3 days of ambient volatility and the earnings day. When there are 3 days left to earnings, our implied volatility is (25 + 25 + 25 + 100)/4 = 43.75% Then 2: (25 + 25 + 100)/3 = 50% Then 1: (25+100)/2 = 62.5% Until only the earnings day left: Our volatility is simply just the event vol – 100%.Do you see what is happening here?
The "average weight of remaining boxes" on the conveyor belt is increasing. But it's not because any of the boxes are getting bigger. It's because there are less small boxes to bring the average weight down! What looks like an increase in implied volatility is just the ambient volatility rolling off the conveyor belt.So in short, the IV Ramp is an illusion.
Now for some math.
Now we can focus on what we are betting on – the Event Volatility. To calculate the event volatility we need to break the total implied volatility (the volatility you see on your screen) into 2 parts.- Part1 – Ambient Volatility/Diffuse Volatility
- Part2 – Event Volatility