The Big Idea
Volatility is how much prices jump around. It measures the wildness of the market.
Think of two roller coasters. One is smooth and slow. The other is fast, twisty, and has crazy drops. Both are roller coasters, but they give you very different rides. Low volatility is the smooth ride. High volatility is the crazy one.
In trading, low volatility means prices move slowly and predictably. High volatility means prices jump around wildly. Both can make you money, but they require totally different approaches.
How Volatility Is Measured
There are different ways to measure volatility, but here are the most common.
Daily Range
How much a price moves from its highest point to its lowest point in one day. A stock that moves $1 per day has lower volatility than one that moves $10 per day.
ATR (Average True Range)
The average daily range over a period (usually 14 days). A popular volatility measure that accounts for gaps between days.
Standard Deviation
A math term that describes how much prices stray from the average. Higher numbers mean more volatility.
VIX (for the stock market)
The famous “fear gauge.” It measures expected volatility for the S&P 500 over the next 30 days. Low VIX = calm markets. High VIX = panic.
Don’t worry about the exact math. What matters is recognizing when something is more or less volatile than usual.
Why Volatility Matters
Reason 1: Bigger Moves
High volatility means bigger price swings. Traders can make (or lose) money faster.
Reason 2: Wider Stops Needed
In high volatility, normal price wiggles are bigger. Your stop loss needs more room, or you’ll get stopped out constantly by noise.
Reason 3: Spreads Widen
Market makers pull back during volatile periods. Spreads get wider. Trading costs go up.
Reason 4: Different Strategies Work
Range trading works well in low volatility. Breakout trading works well in high volatility. Knowing which environment you’re in helps you pick the right strategy.
Reason 5: Position Sizing Must Adjust
If you use the same position size in high and low volatility, your dollar risk changes dramatically. Adjust size based on volatility to keep risk consistent.
What Causes High Volatility?
Cause 1: Major News
Earnings reports, Fed announcements, geopolitical events. Anything surprising causes prices to jump.
Cause 2: Market Crises
Crashes, bank failures, pandemic announcements. Fear creates massive volatility.
Cause 3: Low Liquidity Periods
Overnight sessions, holidays, lunch hours. Fewer traders means bigger swings on small orders.
Cause 4: Earnings Seasons
When many companies report at once, individual stocks get volatile, pulling the market around.
Cause 5: Options Expiration
Monthly and quarterly options expirations can cause unusual price moves.
The Relationship with Drawdown
High volatility usually means larger drawdowns if you trade the same way. The daily swings get bigger. Stops get hit more often. Losses pile up faster.
Smart traders reduce position size during high volatility to keep drawdowns manageable. If a market doubles in volatility, you might halve your position size to keep risk the same.
High vs Low Volatility Markets
Low Volatility Examples
- Utility stocks
- Large consumer staples (Procter & Gamble)
- Government bonds
- USD/CHF in calm periods
Medium Volatility Examples
- Most large-cap stocks
- Major forex pairs
- Gold during normal conditions
High Volatility Examples
- Small-cap stocks
- Tech and biotech stocks around earnings
- Cryptocurrencies
- Penny stocks
- Oil and gas during geopolitical events
Higher volatility means bigger potential gains AND bigger potential losses. Neither is automatically better. It depends on your strategy and risk tolerance.
Adjusting Your Trading
In Low Volatility
- Position sizes can be slightly larger (less risk per point of movement)
- Stops can be tighter (less noise to account for)
- Range-trading strategies work well
- Expect slower, smaller profits
In High Volatility
- Reduce position sizes (more risk per point of movement)
- Widen stops to account for bigger wiggles
- Breakout and momentum strategies often work better
- Wider profit targets are realistic
- Be extra disciplined with risk management
Common Mistakes Beginners Make
Mistake 1: Ignoring Volatility Changes
Using the same position size in calm markets and crazy markets. Your risk suddenly doubles when volatility doubles.
Mistake 2: Using Tight Stops in Volatile Markets
Normal volatility wiggles stop you out constantly. You lose a string of small losses before any real trade idea plays out.
Mistake 3: Chasing Volatile Stocks
Big moves look exciting. But beginners trying to trade super volatile stocks often blow up because they can’t handle the swings.
Mistake 4: Trading During Volatility Spikes
News events cause volatility spikes. Many beginners try to trade these, thinking it’s easy money. Usually, it’s just dangerous.
Mistake 5: Not Knowing What’s Normal
Don’t freak out at normal volatility for your instrument. A 2% day in Bitcoin is quiet. A 2% day in utilities is massive. Know what’s normal before judging.
The Big Picture
Volatility is one of the most important market conditions to understand. It changes everything about how you should trade.
Here’s what to remember:
- Volatility measures how much prices move
- High volatility = big moves. Low volatility = small moves.
- Adjust position size based on volatility to keep risk consistent
- Adjust stop width for volatility (wider in volatile markets)
- Different strategies work in different volatility environments
- Volatility usually rises during crises and drops during calm
- Beginners should start with medium volatility instruments
A great trader once said: “The market has two modes: fear and greed. Volatility tells you which one is winning.” Learn to read volatility, and you’ll always know what kind of market you’re in.
Related Terms
- What Is a Stop Loss? — Stops must adapt to volatility
- What Is Position Size? — Size based on volatility
- What Is Drawdown? — Volatility affects drawdown size
- What Is Volume? — Volume and volatility often move together
- What Is Liquidity? — Low liquidity increases volatility
← Back to the Complete Trading Terms Glossary
Focus on the process. Trust the stats. Stay consistent.