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Just realized most options traders sleep on IV percentile when it comes to finding the highest IV options setups. It's literally one of the simplest ways to identify where volatility is actually priced in versus where it's been historically.
So here's the thing - IV percentile compares current implied volatility to a stock's past range, then spits out a 0-100% score. Zero means the stock is at its lowest volatility point. 100% means it's at peak levels. The practical use case? When you're looking for highest IV options to short volatility on, this metric cuts through the noise.
I ran a quick screen looking for stocks with IV percentile above 50%, market cap over 40 billion, and decent call volume. The list that popped up included names like Arm Holdings, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Eli Lilly, Boeing, Pfizer, Amgen, Fortinet, Nextera Energy, RTX Corp, and PayPal. Pretty solid mix of large-cap names showing elevated volatility.
What's interesting is even with the VIX sitting near 6-month lows, these individual stocks still have highest IV options available. That's the edge most people miss. When the broader market is calm but specific names are hot, that's where you can find actual opportunities.
The strategy I typically use when IV percentile is elevated is selling volatility through structures like iron condors or strangles. But here's the key - you only want to do this if the stock's IV is high relative to the market. If everything is expensive, there's no edge. But if the market is quiet and you've got a few names with elevated volatility? That's when you can actually collect premium.
Let me walk through a quick example. Say you're looking at a stock with highest IV options and you want to set up an iron condor. You'd sell an out-of-the-money put, buy an even further OTM put for protection, then do the same on the call side. The premium collected could give you a 20-25% profit potential with solid probability, depending on the strikes you choose.
Obviously, options carry real risk - you can lose your entire investment. This is just how I think about screening for opportunities. The real takeaway is that IV percentile is a filter worth using if you're serious about finding highest IV options to trade. Definitely do your own analysis and talk to an advisor before pulling the trigger on anything.