What is historical volatility versus implied volatility?

Volatility is a term used to describe the degree of change in a stock or market’s price. Stock market volatility is high when there is a lot of fluctuation in the prices of securities. Volatility can be measured on a historical or implied basis. Historical volatility is the measurement of how much prices have fluctuated in the past based on original data. Implied volatility is a calculation based on current data and speculation about future price movement. Both are important when analyzing possible investment choices.

Historical volatility refers to the measurement of price movement over time. It is calculated by taking the previous value of a security and dividing it by the initial price and then multiplying it by 100. This result is then multiplied by 100 again to provide a final result. The result is then compared to previous historical values to reveal any significant price changes. Historical volatility is most helpful when analyzing various investment strategies or making public policy decisions.

Implied volatility is calculated from the price of the options relative to the strike and number of day to expiration, it is the expected movement based on predictions about the future. Many factors affect future stock prices, such as earnings announcements, economic growth, government policies, regulatory changes and competition among companies. These factors are incorporated into models that project future stock prices. The estimated future prices are then applied to current market values to calculate an implied volatility value. These values are typically lower than historical values because of the estimated quality of future projections. Some experts view implied volatility as more accurate than historical values because it takes into account predicted future events.

When investors use options to create a synthetic volatility, it creates a variable that reflects the degree of future uncertainty. In this case, synthetic historical volatility reflects certain choices that an investor makes at the time he purchases options. For example, if an investor expects economic growth to increase in a certain year, he may choose higher implied volatilities for that year compared to others. When he does this, he is creating his own historical volatility- he is choosing which factors should be more historically volatile (good or bad) and which should be less (stable).

Historical and implied volatilities are important when analyzing recent market trends or making investment decisions. Many investors use historical volatility to predict future stock movements and apply options to increase their profits in that direction. Others use implied volatility to estimate possible scenarios for future market growth based on expert predictions. Both are useful when creating a synthetic volatility value for an upcoming market event or investment strategy choice.