Vanna-Charm
Vanna and Charm are second-order options Greeks that drive systematic dealer hedging flows as spot prices and time pass, creating predictable intraday and expiry-related price pressure in equity and volatility markets.
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What Is Vanna-Charm?
Vanna and Charm are second-order options Greeks — derivatives of the primary Greeks — that describe how a dealer's delta hedge must be adjusted as market conditions evolve. Vanna measures how an option's delta changes as implied volatility moves; mathematically, it is the rate of change of delta with respect to volatility (or equivalently, the rate of change of vega with respect to spot price). Charm (also called delta decay) measures how an option's delta changes as time passes — it quantifies the daily drift in delta exposure purely from the passage of time, even if price and volatility remain constant. Together, these two Greeks generate systematic, mechanical hedging flows from options market makers that can dominate short-term price action, particularly around large options expiry events and during volatility regime shifts.
Why It Matters for Traders
Dealers who sell options must continuously rehedge their delta exposure to remain market-neutral. When Vanna and Charm cause a dealer's aggregate delta to shift — due to a volatility spike or simply the calendar rolling forward — they must buy or sell the underlying asset en masse. These flows are predictable in direction if you know the aggregate positioning of the dealer community. For example, in a market where dealers are net short puts (a common state when institutional investors are buying downside protection), a spike in implied volatility increases negative delta across those puts (via Vanna), forcing dealers to sell futures as a hedge — amplifying the initial selloff. This is the mechanical engine behind many volatility feedback loops observed in equity markets. During the days approaching major options expiries, Charm flows can be particularly powerful, as delta decay accelerates in the final 0–5 days of an option's life.
How to Read and Interpret It
Traders cannot observe Vanna and Charm directly, but several platforms (SpotGamma, SqueezeMetrics, Tier1Alpha) estimate aggregate dealer Greek exposures from public options data. Key interpretive frameworks:
- Positive aggregate Vanna: When volatility falls, dealers gain positive delta and must sell the underlying to rehedge — creates a volatility stabilizing dynamic.
- Negative aggregate Vanna: When volatility rises, dealers lose delta and must sell — creates a volatility destabilizing, reflexive feedback loop.
- Charm into expiry: As options approach expiration, delta decays toward 0 (for OTM) or 1 (for ITM). Dealers must unwind hedges accordingly. In a put-heavy market, expiring puts mean dealers buy back short futures — potentially supportive for prices into expiry.
- Monitor the gamma exposure (GEX) level alongside Vanna/Charm to understand whether dealer flows are likely to pin prices or release them.
Historical Context
The February 2018 Volmageddon event illustrated Vanna flows in extreme form. As equity volatility spiked following a strong wage inflation print, dealers who were short volatility products accumulated massive negative delta through Vanna. This forced mechanical selling of S&P 500 futures, which pushed the VIX from approximately 17 to 37 in a single session — one of the largest single-day VIX spikes on record. The XIV (inverse VIX ETP) was wiped out within days, losing over 90% of its value. The self-reinforcing nature of the move — volatility rising, forcing selling, causing more volatility — was a textbook Vanna feedback loop. Similarly, December 2018 saw Charm flows amplify a holiday-season selloff as dealers unwound put hedges with declining market participation.
Limitations and Caveats
Vanna and Charm analysis requires accurate knowledge of dealer positioning, which is inferred rather than observed directly. Retail and institutional positioning can offset dealer flows in ways that are difficult to model. These Greeks also behave nonlinearly near large strikes and at-the-money options, where small spot or volatility moves cause outsized delta changes. Additionally, the rise of zero-days-to-expiry (0DTE) options has complicated traditional Charm analysis, as these ultra-short-dated options have extreme Charm profiles that can reverse within hours rather than days.
What to Watch
- Dealer gamma exposure estimates from SpotGamma or similar services around major strike levels
- Implied volatility term structure for signs of near-term volatility mean reversion that could trigger Vanna flows
- The put/call ratio to infer whether dealers are net long or short gamma and which direction Vanna flows will point
- 0DTE options volume as a wild card that can distort traditional Vanna-Charm calculations intraday
Frequently Asked Questions
▶What is the difference between Vanna and Gamma for options traders?
▶Why do markets often rally into large options expiries?
▶How can retail traders use Vanna and Charm analysis practically?
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