Template:Financial risk types Volatility risk is the risk of an adverse change of price, due to changes in the volatility of a factor affecting that price. It usually applies to derivative instruments, and their portfolios, where the volatility of the underlying asset is a major influencer of option prices.<ref name="Brenner et al">Menachem Brenner, Ernest Y. Ou, Jin E. Zhang (2006). "Hedging volatility risk". Journal of Banking & Finance 30 (2006) 811–821</ref> It is also relevant to portfolios of basic assets, and to foreign currency trading.<ref name="Brenner et al" />

Volatility risk can be managed by hedging with appropriate financial instruments.<ref name="AvellanedaParas">Template:Cite journal</ref> These are volatility swaps, variance swaps, conditional variance swaps, variance options, VIX futures for equities, and (with some construction) caps, floors and swaptions for interest rates.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Andrew Lesniewski (2015). Managing interest rate volatility risk</ref> Here, the hedge-instrument is sensitive to the same source of volatility as the asset being protected (i.e. the same stock, commodity, or interest rate etc.). The position is then established such that a change in the value of the protected-asset, is offset by a change in value of the hedge-instrument. The number of hedge-instruments purchased, will be a function of the relative sensitivity to volatility of the two: the measure of sensitivity is vega, the rate of change of the value of the option, or option-portfolio, with respect to the volatility of the underlying asset.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Option traders often seek to create "vega neutral" positions, typically as part of an options trading strategy.<ref>See, e.g., Vega Neutral Option Strategies</ref> The value of an at-the-money straddle, for example, is extremely dependent on changes to volatility. Here the total vega of the position is (near) zero — i.e. the impact of implied volatility is negated — allowing the trader to gain exposure to the specific opportunity, without concern for changing volatility.Template:Citation needed

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