When Volatility Turns Before You Are Ready: Adapting the Plan Without Chasing

One of the most common mistakes in options trading is believing that a good idea must be implemented exactly as originally planned. Markets rarely cooperate with our preferred timing. In this case, the plan was straightforward: wait for implied volatility to fall further and then establish another long strangle position. The setup never arrived.

Instead, implied volatility began rising before the desired entry point was reached. The decision was no longer about finding the perfect trade. It became a decision about how to respond when reality diverges from expectations. That distinction may seem small, but it often separates disciplined investors from reactive traders.

Observation

The initial observation was that volatility remained somewhat elevated relative to the desired entry level for a long volatility position. Premiums were not yet attractive enough to justify allocating capital to a new long strangle. Patience appeared to be the correct decision.

However, markets do not owe participants another opportunity. While waiting for lower implied volatility, the volatility environment started to change. Instead of declining further, implied volatility began to move higher. The expected setup gradually became less likely to occur.

IVP on 16 June 2026
I wanted to wait for even lower IV, premiums were still a bit high

Earlier volatility conditions remained above the preferred level for initiating a new long volatility position, encouraging patience rather than immediate action.

At this point, there were several possible responses. One could abandon the market entirely, chase the missed opportunity, or adjust exposure according to the new environment. The important question was not whether the original forecast was wrong. The important question was how to manage capital under the conditions that actually existed.

As implied volatility moved toward a more moderate level, additional short premium exposure became a reasonable alternative. Rather than making a large directional change, the adjustment focused on position sizing and controlled risk deployment.

IVP on 18 June 2026
IVP rose to medium level so I added more short position of 1 BTC

Volatility percentile moved into a medium range, creating a different opportunity set than the one originally anticipated.

Explanation

Many investors frame decisions as binary outcomes. Either the market follows the anticipated path or it does not. In reality, professional investing is usually about managing probabilities rather than predicting exact outcomes.

The original thesis relied on lower volatility creating an attractive entry for long volatility exposure. When that opportunity disappeared, the investment process required adaptation rather than stubbornness. Refusing to adjust would effectively mean allowing the market to dictate participation.

A useful framework is to separate market forecasts from position sizing decisions. Forecasts are uncertain. Position sizing is controllable. When implied volatility rose into a medium percentile range, it did not necessarily justify maximum exposure. It simply justified a different allocation than before.

Instead of deploying aggressive leverage, a moderate percentage of available margin was used. This approach acknowledges two realities simultaneously: volatility is no longer extremely cheap, but it is not necessarily expensive enough to warrant excessive caution either. The response therefore sits between the extremes of aggressive buying and complete inactivity.

Such decisions often appear less exciting than large directional bets. Yet much of long-term performance comes from consistently adjusting risk exposure according to changing conditions rather than waiting endlessly for perfect opportunities.

My book after adding short position
The current short position of 3 BTC was going to be harvested soon, decided to add more 1 BTC short with longer DTE since IVP is of 50%

Portfolio exposure was expanded incrementally as volatility conditions evolved, emphasizing measured risk allocation rather than an all-or-nothing decision.

Implication

The broader lesson extends far beyond options trading. Investors frequently anchor themselves to an ideal entry price, ideal valuation, or ideal market condition. When reality fails to deliver that exact scenario, they become inactive. Capital remains idle while conditions continue evolving.

A more resilient process recognizes that markets move through ranges rather than precise levels. The objective is not to identify the perfect point on that range. The objective is to maintain a portfolio structure that remains sensible across multiple possible outcomes.

Several practical principles emerge from this experience:

  • Separate trade thesis from position size.

  • Avoid all-or-nothing decision making.

  • Accept that ideal opportunities may never appear.

  • Adjust exposure gradually as conditions change.

  • Prioritize survival and flexibility over precision.

Investors often overestimate the value of perfect timing and underestimate the value of consistent risk management. Missing the absolute best entry point is usually survivable. Building oversized positions because a missed opportunity creates urgency is far more dangerous.

In options markets especially, volatility regimes can shift before participants are prepared. The goal is not to predict every shift correctly. The goal is to maintain a process that allows adaptation without compromising risk controls.

Over time, successful investing becomes less about forecasting the future and more about responding rationally when the future unfolds differently than expected. Markets will regularly invalidate our preferred scenarios. The quality of our response is often more important than the quality of our prediction.

Harvesting 85% of Premium: A BTC Short Put Trade from IVP 62 to IVP 40

Nine days earlier, I was sitting on an unrealized loss on my BTC short put positions as implied volatility expanded and market sentiment deteriorated.

That discomfort was precisely why the opportunity existed.

When volatility eventually normalized, the position recovered and allowed me to harvest most of the available premium without holding the option until expiration.

This trade serves as a useful reminder that successful options investing is often less about predicting direction and more about understanding volatility.

Observation

On 4 June 2026, I sold a BTC 55,000 put option while implied volatility percentile (IVP) stood at 62.

The trade was not initiated because I had a strong directional conviction about Bitcoin.

Instead, the opportunity came from the volatility environment.

An IVP of 62 suggested that implied volatility was elevated relative to its recent history. From a short volatility perspective, this increased the attractiveness of selling option premium, provided that risk was appropriately managed.

The position was held for nine days and closed on 13 June 2026.

During that period, IVP declined from 62 to 40.

The option was originally sold for 215 USDT and repurchased for 30 USDT.

After accounting for all trading costs and fees, the trade generated a net profit of approximately $166.08.

The position captured approximately 85% of the available premium before expiration.

Figure 1. BTC 55,000 short put trade entered on 4 June 2026 and closed on 13 June 2026 after harvesting approximately 85% of the available premium.

Explanation

The interesting aspect of this trade is that the primary source of profit was not a dramatic market move.

Rather, it was the combination of:

  • Time decay (theta)
  • Volatility compression
  • Active profit harvesting

When implied volatility falls, option prices generally decline, all else equal.

For short option positions, this creates a tailwind.

This is one reason why short volatility strategies can be attractive following periods of elevated uncertainty.

As fear subsides and implied volatility normalizes, option sellers can benefit even without a significant directional move in the underlying asset.

The decision to close the position before expiration is equally important.

Many traders become tempted to hold short options until the final days in order to collect the last remaining premium.

In practice, however, the risk-reward profile often deteriorates.

After most of the premium has already been harvested, the remaining profit potential becomes limited while event risk, gap risk, and late-stage option sensitivity remain present.

In this case, the majority of the available premium had already been captured.

Closing the position converted unrealized gains into realized gains and removed further exposure.

Implication

For aspiring options fund managers and systematic volatility traders, the lesson is straightforward.

The objective is not to maximize profit on every trade.

The objective is to maximize the efficiency of risk-adjusted returns over many trades.

This BTC short put demonstrates that successful short volatility investing is often a process of repeatedly harvesting volatility risk premium when conditions are favorable and redeploying capital into future opportunities.

The most valuable part of the trade was not the $166.08 profit.

It was the confirmation of a repeatable process:

  1. Identify elevated implied volatility.
  2. Sell premium when compensation is attractive.
  3. Allow volatility and time decay to work.
  4. Harvest profits before risk begins to dominate remaining reward.

Professional investing is ultimately a game of process rather than prediction.

This trade was simply one example of that principle in action.


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