IV + VOLUME SPIKE

Victor Gonzalez

Founder of MarketSnack

An IV + Volume Spike happens when:

Implied Volatility (IV) suddenly increases, AND 

Option volume surges well above normal levels. 

This combination often signals that traders are expecting big moves ahead — and they’re rushing into contracts. 

Why do traders care?

IV spike = fear or excitement. It reflects higher expected movement. 

Volume spike = unusual activity. More contracts trading than normal. 

Together = smoke and fire. Traders aren’t just nervous — they’re acting on it. 

How to spot it (quick tells)

● IV chart shows a sudden upward jump. 

● Option volume is several times higher than average. 

● Volume often exceeds current Open Interest (OI). 

● Big sweeps/blocks concentrated in near-term expiries. 

Interpreting the intent

Bullish case: Call volume spikes + rising IV → speculation on upside. 

Bearish case: Put volume spikes + rising IV → protection or downside bets. 

Event-driven: Before earnings, Fed announcements, or major news → traders bid up IV + volume. 

Rules of thumb

● “IV without volume = empty hype. Volume without IV = routine churn. Both together = signal.” 

IV spikes before events = premium is expensive, beware IV crush after. 

Clustered spikes at certain strikes often highlight levels of interest. 

Direction matters. Check whether calls or puts dominate the spike. 

Practical playbook

Momentum trader: Follow IV+volume spikes that align with market trend. 

Contrarian trader: Fade overpriced IV after events when volume dries up. 

Risk-aware: Avoid chasing IV spikes blindly — premiums are inflated. 

Quick checklist (IV + Volume Spike Scan)

● Did IV jump sharply? 

● Is option volume unusually high vs average? 

● Is volume > OI? 

● Are spikes in calls, puts, or both? 

● Is there a known catalyst ahead? 

Ready to start trading the future?