Quote from dylan57:
How do you tell if implied volatilty of an option is high? I know that the higher implied volatility is the more expensive the option but am confused on how high is high. 100%? 200%?
Quote from cfredstan:
... you could see that IV was very high and that selling puts or calls would make you a lot of money because the prices were so inflated.
Quote from mac:
I've always understood that you should compare the IV with the historical volatility of the same contract.
Quote from dmo:
But if you don't have a strong opinion about future volatility, you use the volatility that the market is currently implying - the implied volatility. If crude oil 60 calls are trading at 85% IV and the 61 calls are trading at 90% IV, then based on historic patterns the 61 calls are overpriced relative to the 60 calls. That's a much more concrete - and useful - standard to use than comparing the IV to the historic IV.