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Dan puts implied volatility in its proper place: It’s not the single most important factor in wheel trading, but it meaningfully improves outcomes over time. Using a field-goal analogy, Dan explains how volatility analysis adds a “little edge” on each trade that compounds across many cycles. He then goes deeper into when volatility matters most, plus a practical framework for evaluating whether selling puts or calls into earnings creates a favorable “sweet spot.”
IV is an edge, not the core driver. Underlying price movement and theta are usually more influential in wheel outcomes, but IV adds incremental advantage that compounds over time.
Active and passive wheel traders use IV differently. Active traders may require confirmation that options are overpriced; passive traders may prioritize keeping the cycle going and capturing the long-run risk premium.
Humility matters in volatility forecasting. You can’t know with certainty whether options are mispriced until after expiration, so rules-based processes help reduce overconfidence.
Regime awareness beats day-to-day noise. A few low-IV days are normal; weeks or months of a pattern can justify sitting out or adjusting tactics, especially in strong rebound “freight train” markets.
Extremes cut both ways. Slightly high IV can be attractive for selling, but extremely high IV may signal risk you don’t understand.
Earnings setups can be evaluated objectively. Compare historical earnings gaps with the option’s break-even/indifference “sweet spot” to judge whether premium meaningfully compensates for the expected move.
If selling calls to exit stock into earnings, assignment probability matters. At-the-money or slightly in-the-money calls can improve assignment odds and provide more downside cushion, but the true advantage comes from time premium, not intrinsic value.
Learn more about host Dan Passarelli and Market Taker Mentoring: MarketTaker.com
Get exclusive content including video trade walk-throughs, Dan's actual trades, monthly AMA webinars and more: wealthbuildingpodcast.com
Subscribe on your preferred platform and leave a review to help more traders discover the show.
Disclosure:
Options involve risk and are not suitable for all investors. Prior to buying or selling an option, investors must read Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options (ODD) which can be found at https://www.theocc.com/company-information/documents-and-archives/options-disclosure-document
Don’t trade with money you are not prepared to lose. Anything discussed on this show is intended to be generalized information and not intended to be a recommendation to buy or sell any security. The host and guests are not familiar with listeners’ specific situations. For trading information relevant to your specific needs, speak with a licensed broker or advisor.
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By Wealth Building With Options5
2828 ratings
Dan puts implied volatility in its proper place: It’s not the single most important factor in wheel trading, but it meaningfully improves outcomes over time. Using a field-goal analogy, Dan explains how volatility analysis adds a “little edge” on each trade that compounds across many cycles. He then goes deeper into when volatility matters most, plus a practical framework for evaluating whether selling puts or calls into earnings creates a favorable “sweet spot.”
IV is an edge, not the core driver. Underlying price movement and theta are usually more influential in wheel outcomes, but IV adds incremental advantage that compounds over time.
Active and passive wheel traders use IV differently. Active traders may require confirmation that options are overpriced; passive traders may prioritize keeping the cycle going and capturing the long-run risk premium.
Humility matters in volatility forecasting. You can’t know with certainty whether options are mispriced until after expiration, so rules-based processes help reduce overconfidence.
Regime awareness beats day-to-day noise. A few low-IV days are normal; weeks or months of a pattern can justify sitting out or adjusting tactics, especially in strong rebound “freight train” markets.
Extremes cut both ways. Slightly high IV can be attractive for selling, but extremely high IV may signal risk you don’t understand.
Earnings setups can be evaluated objectively. Compare historical earnings gaps with the option’s break-even/indifference “sweet spot” to judge whether premium meaningfully compensates for the expected move.
If selling calls to exit stock into earnings, assignment probability matters. At-the-money or slightly in-the-money calls can improve assignment odds and provide more downside cushion, but the true advantage comes from time premium, not intrinsic value.
Learn more about host Dan Passarelli and Market Taker Mentoring: MarketTaker.com
Get exclusive content including video trade walk-throughs, Dan's actual trades, monthly AMA webinars and more: wealthbuildingpodcast.com
Subscribe on your preferred platform and leave a review to help more traders discover the show.
Disclosure:
Options involve risk and are not suitable for all investors. Prior to buying or selling an option, investors must read Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options (ODD) which can be found at https://www.theocc.com/company-information/documents-and-archives/options-disclosure-document
Don’t trade with money you are not prepared to lose. Anything discussed on this show is intended to be generalized information and not intended to be a recommendation to buy or sell any security. The host and guests are not familiar with listeners’ specific situations. For trading information relevant to your specific needs, speak with a licensed broker or advisor.
Trumpet
Wah Wah Wah
Wah wah trumpet failed joke punch line.wav by Doctor_Jekyll -- https://freesound.org/s/240195/ -- License: Attribution 4.0
Dramatic Drum Roll
dramatic drum roll.wav by ingsey101 -- https://freesound.org/s/51401/
-- License: Attribution 3.0

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