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Greeks During a Volatility Crush

When implied volatility collapses after an event, Vega inflicts an instant loss on long options, Vomma accelerates it in the wings, and Theta keeps draining — a volatility crush can make you lose even when your directional call was right.

Quick answer: When implied volatility collapses after an event, Vega inflicts an instant loss on long options, Vomma accelerates it in the wings, and Theta keeps draining — a volatility crush can make you lose even when your directional call was right.

Simple explanation

Before a known event — Budget, RBI policy, big results, elections — implied volatility (IV) inflates and option premiums swell. The instant the event passes and uncertainty resolves, IV collapses. This is the volatility crush. Because long options are long Vega, that IV drop hits them immediately: premiums deflate even if Nifty moved in your favour. Sellers who sold the rich pre-event premium profit as it evaporates. Understanding which Greeks drive this is the difference between an edge and a recurring loss.

Visual

Greeks During a Volatility Crush

Vomma is largest in the wings — so OTM options gain the most Vega when IV inflates before an event and suffer the most when it crushes after, amplifying the volatility swing.

ATM2320023850245002515025800VommaNifty spot

Detailed explanation

Vega is the primary hit

A volatility crush is fundamentally a Vega event. Say a Nifty straddle carries combined Vega of 30 and IV drops from 22% to 15% after Budget — that is a 7-point fall, or roughly 30 × 7 = ₹210 per share of pure Vega loss, ₹15,750 per lot, before Theta and regardless of direction. The larger and longer-dated your long-Vega position, the harder the crush hits. This single mechanism is why buying options into events is a classic losing trade.

Vomma amplifies the wings

Vega is not constant during the crush — Vomma governs how it changes. OTM options have high Vomma, so as IV falls their Vega shrinks and their value collapses disproportionately. A cheap OTM wing that inflated impressively before the event can deflate to almost nothing afterward, faster than a linear Vega estimate suggests. This convexity cuts both ways: it is what makes OTM options explode on the way up and implode on the way down.

Theta piles on

Events usually resolve at a known time, and the days leading in carry heavy Theta on the inflated premium. A trader long a straddle into results pays that decay while waiting, then eats the Vega crush the moment the news drops. Vega and Theta attack the same long position together — this is the exact mechanism described in the Theta vs Vega interaction, seen at its most brutal around a scheduled catalyst.

The seller's mirror-image edge

Everything that hurts the buyer helps the premium seller. Selling richly-priced pre-event straddles or strangles means collecting inflated Vega and Theta, then buying back cheap after the crush. The risk is a move so large that Delta and Gamma losses exceed the volatility gain — so sellers size for the gap and often prefer defined-risk structures like Iron Condors. The crush is reliable; the direction of the move is not.

Formula

ΔV ≈ ν · Δσ + ½ · Vomma · (Δσ)² + Θ (Δσ ≪ 0 in a crush)

Greeks during a volatility crush

GreekBehaviour in a crushLong option holderShort option holder
VegaDelivers immediate loss/gain as IV dropsLoses hardGains — the core edge
VommaAmplifies the Vega change in the wingsOTM longs implodeOTM shorts profit fast
ThetaKeeps draining the inflated premiumPays itCollects it
DeltaStill active on the actual moveMay gain if right on directionMay lose if move is large
GammaMove-risk if the event brings a big moveHelps buyerHurts seller
Net effectIV drop dominates unless move is hugeOften loses despite right callUsually wins

Practical example (Nifty)

Illustrative — Nifty spot 24500, lot size 75

Nifty at 24,500 the day before the Union Budget, IV elevated at 24%. You buy the 24,500 straddle for ₹340, combined Vega 32, combined Theta −30. Budget day: Nifty rallies 120 points — your directional read was right. But IV crushes from 24% to 15%, a 9-point drop: Vega loss ≈ 32 × 9 = ₹288 per share. The Delta gain from 120 points is roughly ₹60 net on the straddle, nowhere near enough. Add the day's Theta and you are down about (288 − 60 + 30) = ₹258 × 75 ≈ ₹19,350 per lot — right about the move, wrong about being long volatility.

Why it matters in practice

  • A volatility crush is a Vega event first — long options lose immediately when IV collapses, regardless of direction.
  • Vomma makes OTM wings implode faster than linear Vega suggests; the cheap lottery tickets deflate hardest.
  • Theta compounds the damage on the inflated pre-event premium a buyer paid to hold.
  • Sellers of rich pre-event premium hold the mirror-image edge — but must size for the Gamma of a large move.

Common mistakes

  • Buying straddles or options into Budget, RBI policy or results and losing to the crush despite a correct directional call.
  • Estimating only the Delta payoff of an expected move while ignoring the far larger Vega loss from the IV drop.
  • Buying high-Vomma OTM wings before an event and watching them deflate to near-zero after, faster than expected.
  • Selling pre-event premium without sizing for the Gamma tail — the crush is reliable, but a huge move can still overwhelm it.

Professional usage

Volatility traders check IV rank or percentile and the event calendar before every trade. Ahead of Indian catalysts they refuse to be naively long Vega into the crush; instead they sell the inflated premium, or build calendars and diagonals that are long the cheaper far-dated volatility and short the rich near-dated volatility, profiting from the term-structure collapse rather than getting run over. They treat the crush as one of the most predictable phenomena in the market and position for it deliberately.

Key takeaway

A volatility crush is a Vega event amplified by Vomma and compounded by Theta — it is why buying options into a known Indian catalyst so often loses even when the direction is right, and why selling the inflated premium is a durable edge.

Frequently asked questions

What is a volatility crush?
It is the sharp collapse in implied volatility that happens right after a known event — Budget, RBI policy, results, elections. Option premiums deflate quickly, hurting long-Vega positions.
Which Greek causes the loss in a volatility crush?
Vega, primarily. Long options are long Vega, so when IV falls their value drops immediately, regardless of which way Nifty moves.
Why did I lose on a straddle even though Nifty moved a lot?
The Vega loss from the IV crush exceeded the Delta gain from the move. Around events, the volatility drop usually dominates unless the move is extremely large.
How does Vomma affect a volatility crush?
Vomma makes Vega itself shrink as IV falls, especially for OTM options. So cheap OTM wings implode faster than a linear Vega estimate predicts.
How do sellers profit from a volatility crush?
By selling richly-priced pre-event premium and buying it back cheap after IV collapses. They collect the inflated Vega and Theta, risking only a move large enough to overwhelm the gain.
How can I avoid getting hurt by a volatility crush?
Avoid being naively long options into a known event. Consider selling the inflated premium, or use calendars and diagonals that profit from the volatility term-structure collapse.
Does Theta make a volatility crush worse for buyers?
Yes. The inflated pre-event premium carries heavy Theta, so a long buyer bleeds time value while waiting, then takes the Vega crush on top when the event resolves.

Sources & references

Last reviewed 7 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.

Educational content only — not investment advice. Examples use illustrative numbers. Options trading involves substantial risk. See our Risk Disclosure and SEBI Disclaimer.