Just spotted something useful for volatility traders.
There's this implied volatility heatmap that tracks how market expectations shift across different time frames. What makes it interesting? You get to see both call and put side movements side by side.
Basically shows you when the market's been pricing in wild swings versus calm periods. Different colors indicate different volatility regimes - helps spot when sentiment's actually changing versus just noise.
Pretty handy for anyone trying to gauge whether current IV levels make sense historically.
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CommunityWorker
· 12h ago
This IV heatmap is really nice; finally, there's a tool that lets us clearly see the real battle between calls and puts.
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DEXRobinHood
· 12-05 19:49
IV heatmap is indeed quite interesting; it's much more intuitive than just looking at numbers.
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DeFiVeteran
· 12-05 19:43
This heatmap is really nice. I can finally see the real movements of calls and puts, so I don't have to keep guessing anymore.
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TommyTeacher
· 12-05 19:28
The IV heatmap is truly impressive; only by looking at both calls and puts together can you break the deadlock.
Just spotted something useful for volatility traders.
There's this implied volatility heatmap that tracks how market expectations shift across different time frames. What makes it interesting? You get to see both call and put side movements side by side.
Basically shows you when the market's been pricing in wild swings versus calm periods. Different colors indicate different volatility regimes - helps spot when sentiment's actually changing versus just noise.
Pretty handy for anyone trying to gauge whether current IV levels make sense historically.