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Theta vs Vega

Theta is what an option loses to the passage of time each day; Vega is what it gains or loses when the market re-prices expected volatility — two separate drains and lifts on premium that often fight each other around Indian event catalysts.

Quick answer: Theta is what an option loses to the passage of time each day; Vega is what it gains or loses when the market re-prices expected volatility — two separate drains and lifts on premium that often fight each other around Indian event catalysts.

Simple explanation

An option's premium changes for reasons other than Nifty's direction. Theta bleeds value out every single day as expiry nears — the buyer pays it, the seller collects it. Vega moves value up or down when implied volatility (IV) changes — before Budget or results IV inflates, and after the event it collapses. The trap for Indian traders is buying options into a known event: you pay rich Vega and then IV crush plus Theta drain both work against you at once.

Visual

Theta vs Vega

Vega is largest for at-the-money and longer-dated options — the same strikes that also carry the most Theta, which is why volatility and time decay collide in ATM premium.

ATM2320023850245002515025800Vega (per 1% IV)Nifty spot

Detailed explanation

Time versus expectation

Both Theta and Vega act on an option's time value (the part of premium that is not intrinsic), but for different reasons. Theta drains time value simply because there is less time left for a favourable move. Vega changes time value because the market revised how much it expects Nifty to move. You can lose to Theta on a perfectly calm day and lose to Vega without Nifty moving a single point — they are independent forces on the same pool of premium.

The IV-crush trap

The most expensive lesson in Indian options: before RBI policy, the Union Budget, or a big earnings name, IV rises and premiums inflate. The moment the event passes, IV collapses — often instantly. A trader long a straddle can be right about a big move and still lose because the Vega loss from IV crush swamps the Delta gain, with Theta piling on. Sellers do the opposite: sell rich pre-event Vega and buy it back after the crush.

Why they concentrate together

Both Vega and Theta are largest for at-the-money options — because ATM options hold the most time value, they have the most to lose to time and the most to gain or lose from volatility. But their expiry behaviour diverges: Theta accelerates as expiry nears while Vega shrinks (a weekly has little time for volatility to matter). So weeklies are Theta-dominated and monthlies are Vega-dominated.

Matching your position to the regime

Sell premium when IV is high and expected to fall — you collect Theta and profit from the Vega drop together. Buy premium when IV is low and expected to rise — but respect that you are then paying Theta daily while waiting for the Vega lift. Aligning your Vega sign with your IV view is as important as aligning Delta with your price view; ignoring Theta while you wait is what quietly kills long-volatility trades.

Formula

Θ ≈ ∂V/∂t (per day) · ν = ∂V/∂σ (per 1% IV)

Theta vs Vega at a glance

AspectThetaVega
What it responds toPassage of timeChange in implied volatility
Sign for buyersNegative (pay daily)Positive (gain if IV rises)
Sign for sellersPositive (collect daily)Negative (gain if IV falls)
Effect of nearing expiryAccelerates sharplyShrinks toward zero
Weekly vs monthlyDominates weekliesDominates monthlies
Where it peaksAt-the-moneyAt-the-money and longer-dated
Behaviour around eventsSteady daily bleedInflates before, crushes after
PredictabilityHighly predictableCan gap violently
Who wants itSellers harvest itBuyers want IV to rise into it

Practical example (Nifty)

Illustrative — Nifty spot 24500, lot size 75

Nifty at 24,500, results season, IV elevated at 22%, five days to expiry. You buy the 24,500 straddle (call + put) for ₹300 with combined Vega 30 and combined Theta −25. The event passes: Nifty barely moves but IV collapses from 22% to 16%. Vega loss ≈ 30 × 6 = ₹180 per share, and one day of Theta strips another ₹25 — a combined ₹205 × 75 = ₹15,375 loss per lot, with Nifty flat. That is Theta and Vega ganging up: you were right that it would be calm, but you were positioned long both.

Why it matters in practice

  • Theta is a predictable daily bleed; Vega is a lumpy risk that gaps around events — size them differently.
  • Buying options into a known event means paying inflated Vega that evaporates after, while Theta keeps draining.
  • Sell premium into high IV so the Vega drop and Theta collection work together; buy premium into low IV.
  • Weeklies are a Theta game, monthlies are a Vega game — pick the expiry that matches your edge.

Common mistakes

  • Buying straddles right before earnings or Budget and losing to IV crush and Theta despite a correct directional call.
  • Selling options when IV is already low — thin Theta collected while exposed to a Vega spike if volatility rises.
  • Judging a long option's cost by Theta alone and ignoring that a Vega drop can cost far more in a single session.
  • Confusing realised movement with implied volatility — Nifty can move a lot yet your long option still loses to falling Vega.

Professional usage

Volatility traders check IV rank or percentile before choosing a side: high IV rank favours selling premium (harvest Theta while Vega falls), low IV rank favours buying. Around Indian catalysts they refuse to be naively long Vega into the crush, instead using calendars and ratio spreads that isolate the volatility term structure. They think of Theta as the rent they pay or collect and Vega as the position's exposure to the entire IV surface re-pricing at once.

Key takeaway

Theta is the steady daily rent of an option and Vega is its exposure to the market re-pricing volatility — around Indian events the two often attack a long buyer together, which is why selling rich pre-event premium is such a durable edge.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between Theta and Vega?
Theta measures the option's daily loss from time passing; Vega measures its gain or loss when implied volatility changes by 1%. Theta is about time, Vega is about expected movement.
Why did my option lose money when Nifty moved my way?
Usually IV crush plus Theta. If you were long Vega into an event, the volatility collapse and daily time decay together can exceed the Delta gain from the price move.
Do Theta and Vega peak at the same strike?
Yes — both are largest at-the-money, because ATM options hold the most time value. But Theta accelerates near expiry while Vega shrinks near expiry.
Are weekly options a Theta or Vega trade?
Weeklies are Theta-dominated: little time remains for volatility to matter, so time decay drives P&L. Monthlies carry much more Vega.
How do I profit from both Theta and Vega together?
Sell premium when IV is high and expected to fall. You collect Theta daily and gain as Vega drops — the two work in the same direction for a seller.
What is IV crush and why does it beat Theta buyers?
IV crush is the sharp fall in implied volatility right after a known event. It causes an immediate Vega loss on long options, on top of the daily Theta bleed.
Can I be hurt by Vega even if I hold to expiry?
Yes, in between. Vega affects the mark-to-market value along the way; a mid-life IV drop can force losses or margin calls even if intrinsic value at expiry is fine.

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.