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- 📊 Weekly Table Overview: The Implied Truth - March 8, 2025
📊 Weekly Table Overview: The Implied Truth - March 8, 2025
March 8, 2025
📊 Weekly Table Overview: The Implied Truth
This table provides a comprehensive snapshot of key options, volatility and momentum indicators for major ETFs, helping you identify trading opportunities in options markets. It’s designed to highlight where the market is offering rich premiums, potential trend reversals, and overbought/oversold conditions—all critical for options strategies.

The Implied Truth: March 7, 2025 (closing bell)
The options market is a game of probabilities, not predictions. When implied volatility rises, opportunity follows—if you know where to look. The current landscape presents several notable divergences between implied volatility, relative strength, and breadth across sectors, offering both premium-selling opportunities and potential breakouts for directional traders.
📊 Quick Reference: The Implied Truth
Symbol: ETF ticker (e.g., SPY, QQQ, IWM).
Last: Latest closing price.
P/C Ratio: Put/Call ratio—>1 = bearish, <1 = bullish; extremes can signal contrarian setups.
Impl Vol: Implied Volatility—higher IV = richer premiums, more expected movement.
IV Rank: IV vs. past year’s range—0% = lowest, 100% = highest; >35% favors premium-selling.
IV Percentile: % of time IV was below current level—adds context to IV Rank for volatility shifts.
RSI (2/7/14): Momentum indicator—>80 = overbought, <20 = oversold; shorter RSIs react faster.
High/Low Graph: Shows price vs. 52-week range—+% = near highs, -% = near lows.
📈 Professional Options Strategist’s Insights:
This week's table reveals a mixed landscape of opportunity and caution:
High IV Rank & Percentile: Several ETFs are showing IV Ranks above 50%, signaling elevated volatility relative to the past year. This is a green light for premium-selling strategies like iron condors, strangles, and credit spreads, as the market is likely overpricing risk. Look for ETFs where IV Rank and IV Percentile both confirm elevated conditions for consistency in the volatility environment.
P/C Ratio Extremes: A few ETFs are flashing extreme put/call ratios (>1.5 or <0.7), suggesting potential contrarian setups. For instance, a high P/C ratio often reflects panic hedging—ideal for bullish short put spreads if technicals align. Conversely, low P/C ratios can hint at complacency, setting up well for bearish verticals.
RSI Divergences: The combination of RSI (2/7/14) offers a nuanced look at momentum. If the short-term RSI (2) is oversold (<20) but the RSI (14) remains neutral, it often signals a short-term bounce in an ongoing trend—ideal for short-dated options plays. When all RSIs align in overbought/oversold zones, it strengthens the case for a reversal.
Price vs. 52-Week Range: ETFs trading near 52-week highs with rising IV may be pricing in more upside volatility than warranted. Consider call credit spreads above resistance levels. Conversely, those near 52-week lows with high IV can present short put opportunities with attractive premiums.
Final Thought:
Use this table as both a diagnostic tool and an idea generator. The synergy between volatility metrics and momentum indicators often reveals setups the broader market overlooks. Pair the data with your strategy, and you'll find high-probability trades hiding in plain sight.
Probabilities over predictions,
Andy Crowder
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