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Trading silver via SLV when volatility refuses to calm down

Options 10 minutes to read
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Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Résumé:  When volatility refuses to calm down, even “high IV” can become a trap. This article explains how different option structures can help navigate SLV when uncertainty keeps getting repriced.


Trading silver via SLV when volatility refuses to calm down

What SLV is, and why investors use it

The iShares Silver Trust (SLV) is designed to track the price of physical silver, less fees and expenses. Each share represents a fractional interest in silver bullion held by the trust, making SLV a simple and accessible way for investors to gain exposure to silver without dealing with storage, insurance, or physical delivery.

As a result, SLV is often used for several distinct purposes:

  • as a diversification tool alongside equities and bonds
  • as a hedge against currency debasement or inflationary surprises
  • as a tactical trading vehicle when silver enters strong momentum or stress-driven phases

Because SLV trades like a stock and has a liquid options market, it attracts both long-term investors and short-term traders. That combination is precisely what makes the options market in SLV so informative — and, at times, so challenging to navigate.

Market context: price action before strategy

weekly and daily price charts of SLV showing a steep multi-year uptrend, accelerating price action into early 2026, and price trading far above long-term moving averages.
SLV price action on weekly and daily timeframes highlights a sharp acceleration higher, with price extended far above long-term averages. Such moves often coincide with rising implied volatility and more complex options dynamics. Source: © Saxo

Why this matters now

Silver can be one of the most rewarding markets to trade and one of the most punishing, sometimes in the same week. When volatility is rising, the options market tends to do two things at once:

  • it charges more for protection (puts become expensive)
  • it can keep charging more if uncertainty persists (implied volatility rises further)

That combination is exactly why SLV can feel hard to trade right now, even for premium sellers. High implied volatility is not automatically an invitation to “sell premium”. It can also be a warning label.

This environment can be described as a volatility‑expansion breakdown: implied volatility is near the top of its recent range, the term structure can invert (near‑dated options priced richer than longer‑dated), and downside skew remains steep. In that regime, the goal is not to find the perfect forecast. It is to choose structures that still behave sensibly if volatility stays elevated or increases further.

The current regime: when volatility expands instead of fading

diagram illustrating three features of a volatility-expansion regime: high implied volatility, inverted option term structure, and steep downside skew.
Three characteristics often seen when markets price stress rather than stability: elevated implied volatility, near-dated options priced richer than longer-dated ones, and expensive downside protection. Source: © Saxo

A quick primer: what rising implied volatility changes

Most options education starts with “sell premium when implied volatility is high.” That is directionally correct but incomplete.

When implied volatility is high and rising, two common problems appear:

  1. short premium positions can lose on mark-to-market even without a large price move. If options get repriced higher, short options can become more expensive to buy back.
  2. short gamma structures can get hit twice. A directional move hurts, and the repricing of volatility can worsen the drawdown.

This is why it is worth discussing strategies that are not simply “sell a put” or “sell an iron condor.” In a dislocating, headline-driven tape, structures that look like steady income on calm days can become structurally fragile.

The structure-first framework

Before looking at strategy examples, it helps to decide which of these four goals fits your intent:

  • I want defined risk (I accept smaller maximum gains for a capped worst case)
  • I want capital efficiency (I accept that some structures can have unpleasant tail risk)
  • I want to stay long exposure (but I want to reduce the cost of being long)
  • I want to benefit if volatility cools (without betting everything on a fast “vol crush”)

Strategy overview: matching structure to market conditions

 four-panel strategy overview showing zebra (bullish stock replacement), put ratio spread (bearish or neutral), diagonal spread (neutral or directional), and broken wing butterfly (neutral or range-bound).
Four option structures commonly used when implied volatility is elevated. Each structure addresses a different objective, from directional exposure with reduced time decay to defined-risk range trading. Source: © Saxo

Four educational strategy examples (based on current market conditions)

The examples below are used purely to illustrate how different option structures behave under elevated and rising implied volatility. Premiums and outcomes are indicative and will vary with the SLV price, implied volatility, and execution. Treat them as structure demonstrations rather than signals.


1) Zebra (zero extrinsic back ratio): directional exposure with limited time decay

What it is (mechanics)

  • long 2 in-the-money calls and short 1 at-the-money call. The strikes are selected so that the time value (extrinsic value) collected from the short at-the-money call largely offsets the time value paid for the two long in-the-money calls, reducing overall time decay and making the position behave more like owning the underlying than a typical long option trade.

Why it can fit this regime

  • it aims to behave like stock replacement, reducing theta exposure compared with a straightforward long call.

Key risks

  • it is still directional. If SLV falls, the structure can lose.
  • execution and strike selection matter. “Zebra” is a recipe, not a guarantee.

What to watch

  • price trend and key levels
  • whether implied volatility keeps rising (which can still affect marks, even if theta is reduced)


2) Put ratio spread (1x2): skew-financed downside hedge, with a tail-risk zone

What it is (mechanics)

  • long 1 at-the-money put and short 2 out-of-the-money puts. In simple terms, you buy downside protection close to the current price and help pay for it by selling two cheaper, further-out downside puts. This lowers the upfront cost, but creates a zone where losses can accelerate if SLV falls sharply below the short strikes.

Why it can fit this regime

  • when downside skew is elevated, the rich premium in out-of-the-money puts can help finance the at-the-money hedge.
  • it can work well if price drifts lower but does not crash.

Non-negotiable risk box

  • this structure can carry large downside risk if SLV falls materially below the short strike.
  • it is not a conservative “income” strategy.
  • it typically requires pre-defined management rules before entry (size, exit, adjustment).

What i would watch

  • whether skew remains elevated
  • whether price action becomes more disorderly (gap risk), which increases the probability of the tail-risk region being tested


3) Diagonal spread: time and volatility structure trade

What it is (mechanics)

  • long a longer-dated option (often in-the-money) and short a shorter-dated option (often out-of-the-money), typically on the same side (calls or puts). In plain terms, you own longer-term exposure that is less sensitive to short-term swings, while selling a near-term option to collect premium. The idea is to offset part of the cost of being long by selling time value where options are usually most expensive, while retaining longer-term directional exposure.

Why it can fit this regime

  • it aims to sell the expensive part of the curve (near-dated) while owning longer-dated exposure.
  • if near-term volatility cools faster than longer-dated volatility, the structure can benefit.

Key risks

  • management matters. You may need to roll the short leg.
  • upside can be capped during the short-leg period.
  • assignment risk exists on the short option.

What i would watch

  • term structure (is the front still priced unusually rich versus the back?)
  • whether the underlying trends fast enough to threaten the short strike


4) Broken wing butterfly: defined-risk “landing zone” trade

What it is (mechanics)

  • a three-strike structure that is designed to make the most money if SLV finishes near a specific price level. One side of the structure is intentionally made wider or “broken,” which lowers the cost of entry or caps the worst-case loss, at the expense of giving up some payoff symmetry.

Why it can fit this regime

  • it expresses a view that SLV may cool off and settle near a magnet zone, while keeping tail risk defined.

Key risks

  • timing risk: the move needs to happen by expiry.
  • path risk: sharp moves can still hurt on the way

Practical risk notes

  • Liquidity and spreads: multi-leg strategies can look great on paper and disappoint on execution.
  • Implied volatility can stay elevated: high IV is not a timer.
  • Assignment and margin: short options can be assigned early. Platform margining can reduce required cash, but discipline should remain conservative.
  • Position sizing: in rising-vol regimes, size is often the most underrated edge.


What to monitor going forward

Update only the numbers, not the logic:

  • current SLV spot price and the chosen expiries/strikes used in the examples
  • whether implied volatility is still rising, and whether the term structure remains unusually shaped
  • whether downside skew remains steep

If those flip, the strategy emphasis may flip too. For example: if volatility stops rising and term structure normalises, simpler defined-risk premium selling becomes easier to justify.


Short faq

  • Why not just sell puts if volatility is high?

    Because volatility can keep rising. A short put can lose from both a price decline and a volatility repricing, and the drawdown can be large before time decay helps.

  • Isn’t buying options a bad idea when implied volatility is high?

    Buying single options can be expensive in high IV, but spreads and structure choices can reduce that problem. The point is not “never buy options.” It is “know what you are paying for.”

  • What makes a strategy defined risk?

    You know the maximum loss at entry (ignoring execution slippage). Many multi-leg spreads do this by owning a protective option that caps the tail.
This content is marketing material and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.
The Author is permitted to wait at least 24 hours from the time of the publication before they trade the instruments themselves.
The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options.
This content will not be changed or subject to review after publication.
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Guide on long-term options for strategic portfolio management
Assignment explained - 01 - what every options trader and investor should know
Assignment explained - 02 - how to avoid assignment
Assignment explained - 03 - how to use option assignment to your advantage
Assignment explained - 04 - option assignment cheat sheet
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