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June 14, 2026

Definition

Options Skew

Options skew is the pattern of implied volatility differing across strike prices, usually higher for out-of-the-money puts.

In a perfect world all strikes would share one implied volatility, but in reality out-of-the-money puts often carry higher IV than calls because investors pay up for downside protection — this is the volatility skew or smile. The shape of the skew reveals where the market sees the bigger risk.

Indian index options on Nifty and Bank Nifty typically show a put skew, reflecting persistent demand for crash protection. Traders read changes in skew as a sentiment signal and use it to choose which strikes to buy or sell, since a steep skew makes put-selling strategies relatively more attractive.

Related terms

  • VegaVega measures how much an option's premium changes when implied volatility rises or falls by 1%.
  • Option ChainAn option chain is the full table of all available call and put strikes for a contract, with their prices and data.
  • India VIXIndia VIX is the volatility index that measures the market's expectation of near-term volatility, often called the 'fear gauge'.
  • Implied VolatilityImplied volatility (IV) is the market's forward-looking estimate of how much a stock or index will swing, backed out from current option prices and expressed as an annualised percentage.

Plain-English explainer from The Dispatch Investors Encyclopedia. General information, not financial advice.