Well, based on that, with extremely high IV, I guess it is possible. But wouldn't an IV of 194 be an outlier?
Such high IVs are very normal in the biotech and pharma sector (when waiting for FDA approval of their new medical drug products etc).
And if you were only willing to trade those very high, outlier IVs, wouldn't you spend most of your time just waiting and not trading? Doesn't make sense to me, unless you planned on going all-in on that one trade, which is not something I would do.
Yes, I'm trading such highIVs, but I'm doing exactly the opposite: doing many of such trades using different tickers, and binding (investing) only a minimal money amount in the range of $125 to $250 with each trade and then also using many different tickers. Ie. doing diversification b/c such highIV trades are obviously dangerous. OTOH when traded as spread then one can reduce the risk significantly and also substantially.
No, I'm not constantly looking at them. It's a very normal trade, I'm not doing daytrading or scalping, I'm quietly just waiting till my profit target gets hit and then it gets closed automatically b/c for each open position I already have such close orders opened.
And: above I said I'm not doing daytrading, but that soon will change when my auto-trading program is finished that is still in development; will take about 2 months or so. Then I'll do daytrading with options

Sounds crazy, but I'll try it out

FYI: I'm a relatively newbie in options trading. Just trying to find my own "edge".
Just thinking out loud. I don't know, I haven't even made a real trade yet. lol
Yes, not easy for someone in your position, b/c of such an information overload. But you have to go thru it
But if the general recommendation is to look for a credit >= 1/3 of the spread width, that sounds to me like, for the most part, risk:reward on credit spreads is almost always upside-down.
I haven't studied that yet, but I usually believe only what I myself can confirm...
