General

Implied Volatility

A forward-looking measure derived from the market price of an options contract that reflects how much the market expects a security's price to move in the future. Higher implied volatility means options are more expensive because the market is pricing in larger potential swings. Implied volatility tends to spike before earnings announcements, FDA decisions, and other binary events, and options traders who sell into these spikes are said to be "selling the vol."

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