Volatility Basics
Volatility is the magnitude of price movements, regardless of direction. High volatility means big swings; low volatility means calm markets. In crypto, volatility is both risk and opportunity.
Unlike directional trading where you predict up or down, volatility trading predicts magnitude. You can profit whether the market goes up, down, or sideways—as long as you correctly predict HOW MUCH it will move.
Volatility Measurements
Implied Volatility (IV)
Derived from options prices. Forward-looking. Shows what the market EXPECTS.
Realized Volatility (RV)
Calculated from historical prices. Backward-looking. Shows what ACTUALLY happened.
DVOL Index
Deribit's BTC volatility index. Like VIX for crypto. 30-day IV measure.
IV-RV Spread
The difference between IV and RV. Key signal for vol trading strategies.
Implied vs Realized Volatility
The IV-RV spread is the foundation of volatility trading. When IV significantly exceeds RV, options are expensive and volatility sellers profit. When RV exceeds IV, options are cheap and volatility buyers profit.
IV-RV Trading Signals
IV > RV (Expensive Vol)
Sell volatility. Options overpriced. Market expects more movement than will likely occur. Short straddles, iron condors.
IV < RV (Cheap Vol)
Buy volatility. Options underpriced. Market underestimating potential moves. Long straddles, strangles.
IV ≈ RV (Fair Value)
No clear edge from IV-RV spread. Look for other signals or stay flat on vol.
Understanding DVOL
DVOL is the Bitcoin Volatility Index created by Deribit, the largest crypto options exchange. It aggregates implied volatility from BTC options to create a single number representing 30-day expected volatility.
DVOL Interpretation
DVOL Alpha
DVOL spikes often mark local bottoms in price. Extreme fear (DVOL >100) has historically been a buying opportunity for spot. Conversely, very low DVOL (<45) often precedes volatility expansion.
Vol Crush Trading
Vol crush is the rapid decline in implied volatility after a known event. The market prices in uncertainty before events like FOMC, CPI, or ETF decisions. Once the event occurs, uncertainty resolves and IV collapses.
Vol Crush Strategy
FOMC, CPI, ETF decisions, major upgrades
Sell straddles/strangles when IV is elevated
Buy back options at lower IV for profit
Vol Crush Risk
Vol crush strategies have unlimited risk if the event causes a massive move. Always use defined-risk strategies like iron condors or size positions appropriately. The event outcome could move price beyond your short strikes.
Volatility Strategies
Long Straddle (Buy Vol)
Buy ATM call + put. Profit from big moves in either direction. Best when IV is low and you expect a breakout. Time decay works against you.
Short Strangle (Sell Vol)
Sell OTM call + put. Profit from range-bound markets and IV contraction. Best when IV is high. Unlimited risk on large moves.
Iron Condor (Defined Risk Vol Sell)
Short strangle with protective wings. Defined risk, defined reward. Best for high IV environments when you expect range-bound action.
Calendar Spread (Vol Term Structure)
Sell near-term, buy longer-term. Profit from term structure changes and time decay differential. Works in both directions depending on structure.
Vol Trading Tools
Deribit
Largest crypto options exchange. Source of DVOL. Most liquid BTC/ETH options.
Laevitas
Options analytics platform. IV surfaces, term structure, flow data.
Greeks.live
Real-time options data. Vol cones, skew charts, and large trade tracking.
Amberdata
Institutional-grade volatility data. Historical IV/RV, term structure analysis.
Interactive Vol Dashboard
Explore volatility metrics and regime analysis:
Volatility Regime Analysis
Volatility Strategies
Volatility Trading Tips
- • Sell vol when IV-RV spread is high (IV expensive)
- • Buy vol before major events (FOMC, CPI, upgrades)
- • Watch DVOL index for market-wide vol signals
- • Term structure steepness signals expected volatility changes
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Frequently Asked Questions
Implied volatility is the market's expectation of future price movement, derived from options prices. High IV means the market expects big moves; low IV expects calm. IV is forward-looking, unlike realized volatility which measures past movements.
DVOL is Deribit's Bitcoin Volatility Index, similar to VIX for stocks. It measures 30-day implied volatility from BTC options. High DVOL (>80) signals fear/expected volatility; low DVOL (<50) signals complacency. Use it to time vol trades and gauge market sentiment.
Vol crush is the rapid decline in implied volatility after an anticipated event (like FOMC, CPI, or ETF decisions). Options lose value quickly because the uncertainty is resolved. Traders sell options before events to profit from vol crush.
You can trade vol through: leveraged positions during low IV (expecting expansion), reducing exposure during high IV (expecting contraction), or using perpetual funding rates which correlate with volatility. Straddle-like strategies using perps are also possible.
Implied volatility (IV) is forward-looking—what the market expects. Realized volatility (RV) is backward-looking—what actually happened. When IV > RV, options are 'expensive'; when IV < RV, options are 'cheap'. This spread drives many vol trading strategies.