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Stocks with Notable Option Volatility: REPL, AMAM and FNGR.

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Options Newsman wrote a column · Oct 11, 2023 00:52
Implied volatility is a measure of the market's expectation of the potential price movements of the stock in the future. Here are the stocks with the most notable implied volatility today.
$Groupon(GRPN.US)$'s stock suffered a significant decline of 35.03% in the previous trading session, sending shockwaves through the market. The company's option volume was 54.37K, with an IV percentile of 100%, indicating heightened uncertainty among investors. Currently, the implied volatility is at 161%, above the one-year high of IV at 172%.
The one-day IV change was at 19.1%, indicating that investors are anticipating significant price movement in Groupon's stock. These developments suggest that options traders are expecting further turbulence in Groupon's stock price. However, it remains uncertain which direction the movement will take, given the high level of volatility and the recent downward trend observed in the stock.
Here is the IV Ranking of the day:
Stocks with Notable Option Volatility: REPL, AMAM and FNGR.
The chart only includes any company with market cap of over 100 million and share price of over $2.5.
Top Option Volatility Change:
Stocks with Notable Option Volatility: REPL, AMAM and FNGR.
Conclusion And Risk Management
Option implied volatility is a measure of the market's expectation for how much an asset's price will fluctuate in the future, as implied by the prices of options on that asset.
Options are financial contracts that give the holder the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell an underlying asset at a predetermined price and time. The price of an option is influenced by various factors, including the current price of the underlying asset, the strike price, the time to expiration, and the implied volatility.
Implied volatility represents the level of uncertainty or risk that market participants perceive in the future price movements of the underlying asset. When investors expect greater volatility, they may be more willing to pay a higher price for options to help hedge their risk, which leads to higher implied volatility.
Implied volatility is usually expressed as a percentage and is calculated using an options pricing model, such as the Black-Scholes model. Traders and investors use implied volatility to assess the attractiveness of options prices, to identify potential mispricings, and to manage their risk exposure.
Source: Benzinga, Dow Jones, CNBC
Disclaimer:
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Disclaimer: Moomoo Technologies Inc. is providing this content for information and educational use only. Read more
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