Vega Neutral

Vega Neutral

Vega neutral is a method of managing risk in options trading by establishing a hedge against the implied volatility of the underlying asset. Similarly, if a trader is seeking to create a vega neutral position with options on different underlying products, they have to be very confident in the degree of correlation between the two underlying products’ IV. Vega neutral strategies are usually attempting to profit from the bid-ask spread in implied volatility or the skew between the implied volatility in puts and calls. That said, vega neutral is more often used in combination with other Greeks, as in a delta neutral/vega neutral trade or a long gamma/vega neutral trade. For example, if an options trader has 100 lots of $100 strike calls that have a vega of $10 each, the trader will look to short the same underlying product to eliminate $1,000 worth of vega — say 200 lots of $110 strike calls with a vega of $5. This is oversimplifying it, however, as it doesn't take into account different expirations or any other complexities. In fact, if the the options have different expiry dates, it becomes difficult to achieve true vega neutrality because implied volatility will generally not move by the same amount in options with different terms.

What Is Vega Neutral?

Vega neutral is a method of managing risk in options trading by establishing a hedge against the implied volatility of the underlying asset.

Vega is one of the options Greeks along with delta, gamma, rho and theta. Vega is the Greek that corresponds with the Black-Scholes price factor for volatility, but it represents the sensitivity of the price of an option to volatility and not volatility itself. An options trader will use a vega neutral strategy when he believes that volatility presents a risk to the profits.

How Vega Neutral Works

Vega neutral is not as popular as the neutral positions for the other Greeks. Vega essentially tells traders how a 1% change in the implied volatility (IV) of an option affects the price. So vega is a measure of how sensitive the option premium itself is to volatility. A vega neutral position is a way for options traders to remove that sensitivity from their calculations. If a position is vega neutral, it doesn't make or lose money when the implied volatility changes.

Building a Vega Neutral Portfolio

The vega of a single position is displayed on all the major trading platforms. To calculate the vega of an options portfolio, you simply sum up the vegas of all the positions. The vega on short positions should be subtracted by the vega on long positions (all weighted by the lots). In a vega neutral portfolio, total vega of all the positions will be zero.

Example of Vega Neutral

For example, if an options trader has 100 lots of $100 strike calls that have a vega of $10 each, the trader will look to short the same underlying product to eliminate $1,000 worth of vega — say 200 lots of $110 strike calls with a vega of $5.

This is oversimplifying it, however, as it doesn't take into account different expirations or any other complexities. In fact, if the the options have different expiry dates, it becomes difficult to achieve true vega neutrality because implied volatility will generally not move by the same amount in options with different terms.

The implied volatility term structure shows that most options have a fluctuating IV depending on the expiration month. To deal with the expiration issue, a time-weighted vega can be used with the caveat that it is making a big assumption in that the IV is mainly influenced by the time to expiry.

Similarly, if a trader is seeking to create a vega neutral position with options on different underlying products, they have to be very confident in the degree of correlation between the two underlying products’ IV. 

Vega neutral strategies are usually attempting to profit from the bid-ask spread in implied volatility or the skew between the implied volatility in puts and calls. That said, vega neutral is more often used in combination with other Greeks, as in a delta neutral/vega neutral trade or a long gamma/vega neutral trade.

Related terms:

Black-Scholes Model

The Black-Scholes model is a mathematical equation used for pricing options contracts and other derivatives, using time and other variables. read more

Color

Color is the rate at which the gamma of an option will change over time and is the third-order derivative of an option's value. read more

Delta & Examples

Delta is the ratio comparing the change in the price of the underlying asset to the corresponding change in the price of a derivative. read more

Gamma Hedging

Gamma hedging is an options hedging strategy designed to reduce or eliminate the risk created by changes in an option's delta. read more

Gamma

Gamma is the rate of change of delta with respect to an option's underlying asset price. read more

Greeks

The "Greeks" is a general term used to describe the different variables used for assessing risk in the options market.  read more

Implied Volatility (IV)

Implied volatility (IV) is the market's forecast of a likely movement in a security's price. It is often used to determine trading strategies and to set prices for option contracts. read more

Omega

Omega is an options "Greek" that measures the percentage change in an option's value with respect to the percentage change in the underlying price. read more

Pinning the Strike

Pinning the strike is the tendency of an underlying security's price to close at the strike price of heavily traded options as the expiration date nears. read more

Rho

Rho refers to an options (or book of options) risk exposure to changes in interest rates. read more