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Just realized how many newer traders get caught off guard by what happens right after a big earnings move. You buy a call thinking the stock's gonna moon, it does, but somehow your option is still losing money. That's the IV crush meaning in action, and it's brutal if you don't see it coming.
Here's the thing about implied volatility – it's basically what the market is pricing in for expected moves. Before earnings, option premiums get expensive because market makers are building in protection for massive swings. They're pricing volatility way higher than it might actually be. Then earnings hits, the stock moves, and suddenly all that uncertainty evaporates. Even if the stock went up like you predicted, the option value tanks because the volatility expectations just collapsed.
I've seen this play out countless times. Say AAPL is at $100 the day before earnings and a straddle is only priced at $2 – that's the market saying maybe a 2% move. Compare that to TSLA at $100 with a $15 straddle, which means traders are expecting like a 15% swing. Huge difference in what the market's actually pricing for volatility. If you sell that TSLA straddle pre-earnings and the stock doesn't move 15%, you're profitable. But if you're long and expecting that big move, you better hope it actually happens or the IV crush will wreck your position even if direction is right.
The real trap is not understanding historical volatility versus what's being priced in. VIX spikes before major events, option prices get inflated, then once the event passes, IV contracts hard. That's when the crush happens. I've found that looking at historical earnings moves for a stock versus the current IV pricing is where the edge actually is. Sometimes the market's overpricing the move, sometimes underpricing it.
One pattern I've noticed: when SPY's crashing and VIX is spiking, options go into crush mode too. The fear premium disappears fast once the panic selling stops. This is actually where opportunities hide if you understand the cycle.
Bottom line – before you enter any options trade around earnings or major announcements, check what IV is actually pricing in. Compare it to historical moves. That's how you avoid getting blindsided by a volatility crush. The traders making consistent money aren't the ones predicting stock direction perfectly, they're the ones understanding how volatility pricing works and trading accordingly.