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Implied Volatility (IV) and Vega
The volatility component of option values is called implied volatility (IV).
(For more on implied volatility and how it relates to vega, see Chapter 3.)
IV is a percentage, although in practice the percent sign is often omitted.
This is the value entered into a pricing model, in conjunction with the other
variables, that returns the options theoretical value. The higher the
volatility input, the higher the theoretical value, holding all other variables
constant. The IV level can change and often does—sometimes dramatically.
When IV rises or falls, option prices rise and fall in line with it. But by how
much?
The relationship between changes in IV and changes in an options value
is measured by the options vega. Vega is the rate of change of an options
theoretical value relative to a change in implied volatility . Specifically, if
the IV rises or declines by one percentage point, the theoretical value of the
option rises or declines by the amount of the options vega, respectively.
For example, if a call with a theoretical value of 1.82 has a vega of 0.06 and
IV rises one percentage point from, say, 17 percent to 18 percent, the new
theoretical value of the call will be 1.88—it would rise by 0.06, the amount
of the vega. If, conversely, the IV declines 1 percentage point, from 17
percent to 16 percent, the call value will drop to 1.76—that is, it would
decline by the vega.
A put with the same expiration month and the same strike on the same
underlying will have the same vega value as its corresponding call. In this
example, raising or lowering IV by one percentage point would cause the
corresponding put value to rise or decline by $0.06, just like the call.
An increase in IV and the consequent increase in option value helps the
P&(L) of long option positions and hurts short option positions. Buying a
call or a put establishes a long vega position. For short options, the opposite
is true. Rising IV adversely affects P&(L), whereas falling IV helps.
Shorting a call or put establishes a short vega position.