How To Avoid IV Crush
IV Crush (Implied Volatility Crush) is a sharp drop in implied volatility after a major event—most commonly earnings announcements or major product releases—that significantly affects the price of options. This leads to a sudden drop in option premiums, often causing losses even if the price moves in the expected direction.
Here’s how to avoid or minimize the impact of IV Crush:
🧠 1. Understand What Causes IV Crush
IV rises before major events due to uncertainty. Once the event passes and uncertainty is gone, IV drops sharply. This is most common:
- Before earnings reports
- Before FDA approvals, court rulings, or major product launches
- In M&A rumors or macroeconomic reports
🚫 2. Avoid Holding Long Options Through High-Impact Events
If you’re buying calls or puts only for speculation, avoid holding them through the event that will likely cause the IV crush. Consider:
- Closing the position before earnings
- Selling options instead (more on this below)
💼 3. Use Option Spreads Instead of Naked Long Options
Spreads help reduce your exposure to IV changes.
- Vertical spreads (e.g., bull call spread or bear put spread): Buy one option and sell another at a different strike. The sold leg helps offset IV crush.
- Calendar spreads: These can benefit from differences in IV between near- and far-dated options.
- Iron condors / butterflies: These benefit from IV dropping, so they can actually profit from IV crush.
🔍 4. Check IV Rank / Percentile Before Entering Trades
Use IV Rank or IV Percentile to gauge whether IV is high relative to the past:
- High IV Rank (e.g., > 50%): Consider selling options or using spreads
- Low IV Rank: Buying options may be more reasonable
💡 5. Sell Premium Into the Event
If IV is inflated, you can take advantage by selling options before the event. Strategies include:
- Short straddles or strangles (only for experienced traders with high risk tolerance)
- Iron condors or butterflies for defined risk
- Covered calls or cash-secured puts as lower-risk income plays
These strategies can benefit from IV collapsing.
📊 6. Use Historical vs. Implied Volatility Comparison
Compare implied volatility with historical volatility. If IV is significantly higher than historical, there’s a good chance it will drop after the event.
🧠 Example:
Say a stock trades at $100, and has earnings next week. IV is very high. You buy a $100 call for $5.
- Earnings come out, stock jumps to $105
- But IV drops significantly and the option is now worth only $3.50
- You were right on direction but still lost money
✅ Summary: How to Avoid IV Crush
Strategy | Effect |
---|---|
Avoid long options into earnings | Prevents IV crush losses |
Use spreads | Reduces IV exposure |
Sell options before events | Take advantage of high IV |
Check IV rank/percentile | Understand IV context |
Use defined-risk strategies | Control risk if selling options |