Overnight Greeks
Holding options overnight adds gap risk and event/Vega exposure to your Delta and Gamma — the market can jump on overnight global cues before you can react, and at least one full day of Theta is charged whether or not the index moves.
Quick answer: Holding options overnight adds gap risk and event/Vega exposure to your Delta and Gamma — the market can jump on overnight global cues before you can react, and at least one full day of Theta is charged whether or not the index moves.
Simple explanation
When you carry an option position overnight, three things change versus intraday. First, you take gap risk — global markets, news and events can move Nifty sharply at the next open before you can trade, and high Gamma amplifies that gap. Second, you pay (or collect) a full day or more of Theta, including weekends. Third, Vega and event risk matter because overnight IV can shift on news. Overnight positions can be very profitable on a favourable gap, but they remove your ability to manage risk while the market is closed.
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Overnight Greeks
Overnight, at least one full day of Theta is charged against a long option even while the market is closed — and over a weekend, two or three days of decay accrue at once.
Detailed explanation
Gap risk: the defining overnight hazard
The Indian market closes but the world does not. Overnight moves in the US, crude, currency, and global events can leave Nifty gapping up or down at the next open, with no chance to exit in between. Because Gamma amplifies moves, a large gap can swing an option's Delta and premium dramatically before you can react. This is the core reason overnight positions carry more risk than intraday — you surrender control while exposed.
Theta charged for the full close
Time decay does not pause when the market is shut. Holding a long option overnight costs a full day of Theta; holding over a weekend or an NSE holiday costs two or three days at once. Sellers like this — they collect closed-market decay for free. Buyers must weigh whether the expected overnight move justifies paying that guaranteed time decay, especially on fast-decaying weeklies.
Vega and event risk
Overnight is when scheduled and unscheduled events land — global central-bank decisions, geopolitical news, US data. These can spike implied volatility, so a position carries Vega risk overnight that an intraday trade avoids. Buyers can benefit from an IV expansion; sellers face the risk of a volatility jump inflating the premium against them even before the index moves.
Managing overnight exposure
The standard defences are defined-risk structures (spreads rather than naked options so a gap cannot be unlimited), smaller size, and hedging net Delta with an opposing leg or futures before the close. Traders also avoid carrying large short-Gamma positions over events and long weekends. Rho remains negligible overnight for these short-dated contracts. The mental model: overnight you are exposed but blindfolded, so pre-define the worst case.
Overnight vs intraday exposure
| Factor | Intraday | Overnight | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gap risk | None (you can react) | High | Global cues move the open |
| Theta charged | Hours | One+ full day (2-3 over weekend) | Decay runs while closed |
| Vega/event risk | Minor | Meaningful | News breaks overnight |
| Ability to manage | Full | None while closed | You are blindfolded |
| Rho | Irrelevant | Negligible | Short-dated either way |
Practical example (Nifty)
Illustrative — Nifty spot 24500, lot size 75
Nifty 24,500, you carry one lot of a long 24,500 CE overnight, premium ₹120, Delta 0.52, Gamma 0.004, Theta −18. Overnight US markets rally and Nifty gaps up 150 points to 24,650 at open. Gamma has lifted Delta through the move, so the premium might open near ₹200 — a gain of about ₹80 x 75 = ₹6,000 per lot. But subtract one full day of Theta, roughly ₹18 x 75 = ₹1,350, charged for the close. Had Nifty instead gapped down 150 points, the same Gamma would have accelerated the loss, and you could not have exited overnight.
Why it matters in practice
- Overnight positions take gap risk — the next open can jump on global cues before you can react, and Gamma amplifies the gap.
- At least one full day of Theta is charged while the market is closed; over a weekend or holiday, two or three days accrue at once.
- Vega and event risk matter overnight because IV can spike on news, unlike a contained intraday trade.
- You cannot manage risk while the market is shut, so overnight exposure should be defined-risk and smaller than intraday.
Common mistakes
- Carrying naked short options overnight and being blown out by an adverse gap you could not hedge while the market was closed.
- Ignoring weekend and holiday Theta on long options, then finding two or three days of decay have gutted the premium.
- Holding positions over scheduled events without pricing in the overnight Vega spike and possible IV crush.
- Sizing overnight positions like intraday trades despite the added gap, Theta and event risk that intraday trades avoid.
Professional usage
Professionals who carry overnight positions almost always define their risk — spreads not naked options — so a gap cannot be catastrophic, and they hedge net Delta before the close. Sellers deliberately collect weekend and holiday Theta but only in controlled, defined-risk size, and they flatten or hedge short-Gamma books before major overnight events. They treat the inability to manage risk while the market is closed as the central constraint and size accordingly.
Key takeaway
Overnight adds gap risk, a full day (or more) of Theta, and event/Vega exposure on top of your Delta and Gamma — so carry defined-risk, smaller positions and pre-define the worst case before the close.
Frequently asked questions
What is the main risk of holding options overnight?
Is Theta charged overnight?
Do option sellers benefit from holding overnight?
Does Vega matter for overnight positions?
How do I reduce overnight option risk?
Should I hold options over a long weekend?
Does Rho affect overnight option positions?
Sources & references
Last reviewed 7 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.