If you go to www.ivolatility.com you can see the current IV of any stock and a chart and range of the IV over the past year.
But to be more accurate, I wrote that this is a tool to see if the options are relatively cheap or relatively expensive compared to where they have been priced in the past year.
The other information posted here is only for the SPX index and not relevant for a sepcific stock. You need to look at that specific stock's IV since stocks can have high or low IV no matter what the S&P IV is.
Phil
But to be more accurate, I wrote that this is a tool to see if the options are relatively cheap or relatively expensive compared to where they have been priced in the past year.
The other information posted here is only for the SPX index and not relevant for a sepcific stock. You need to look at that specific stock's IV since stocks can have high or low IV no matter what the S&P IV is.
Phil
Quote from daytrader85:
Hi Coach Phil,
I finally got a hold of your book. To my surprise, I actually found it in my college (UIC) library.
I was reading the first part of the book and you said how to find which options were cheap and expensive by looking at current IV's and comparing them that particular stock or strike's IV range. Is there anyway I could get old IV's, to see what the range was, or do I just have to note it down on my own and work from that??
I hope my question makes sense. Let me know if it doesn't.
Thanks.
Daytrader85
