How do you know whether volatility will rise or fall in the future?

When I look at the volatility graphs of the instrument I want to trade, all I see is just noise with peaks and troughs here and there....
 
When I look at the volatility graphs of the instrument I want to trade, all I see is just noise with peaks and troughs here and there....
IMHO: rmorse is correct! However, some people consider volatility a mean reverting play. For example, when volatility is near it's yearly high, some would think odds are better that it will retract, rather than expand. My 8-ball keeps replying "Ask again later." and "Don't count on it."!
 
IMHO: rmorse is correct! However, some people consider volatility a mean reverting play. For example, when volatility is near it's yearly high, some would think odds are better that it will retract, rather than expand. My 8-ball keeps replying "Ask again later." and "Don't count on it."!

I was an option market maker for 25 years. I can tell you that you need to plan for the unexpected, but use the past to base your assumptions. That gives the highest expectancy in my opinion.
 
When I look at the volatility graphs of the instrument I want to trade, all I see is just noise with peaks and troughs here and there....

There are a ton of people out there who claim its easier to forecast volatility but i think trying to forecast vol is just as challenging as forecasting direction (specially short term vol).

-gariki
 
There are a ton of people out there who claim its easier to forecast volatility but i think trying to forecast vol is just as challenging as forecasting direction (specially short term vol).

They are highly correlated. If you get one, you can often predict the other.
 
They are highly correlated. If you get one, you can often predict the other.

True Bob. What i mean is after say a big flush down and a vol spike, there is a high probability that vol say an year out will come down but short term as in a month out can still be a coin flip. That said, i am not saying its easy to capitilize on it since the pricing will have this fact built in into it.
 
When I look at the volatility graphs of the instrument I want to trade, all I see is just noise with peaks and troughs here and there....



  • Instrument? As in options or the underlying?
  • Could you post one of these volatility graphs?



:)
 
I never traded index options. I traded equity options. They had a predictable pattern around earnings and events. Option flow was predictable and option vol was too, for many years. Direction....to me...not so much.
 
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