When two correlated stocks diverge in price, their implied volatility often diverges too. The IV spread between correlated legs adds a second dimension to the pairs signal — and can tell you which way convergence is likely to come.
The z-score tells you the spread has stretched. It doesn't tell you why. Sometimes a spread stretches because of temporary price momentum in one leg. Sometimes it's because the options market has identified a genuine asymmetry — different levels of uncertainty being priced into each leg.
Implied volatility (IV) is the options market's expectation of future price movement. When IV diverges between two correlated stocks while their price spread also widens, you have two independent signals pointing in the same direction — a stronger trade setup than either alone.
The IV spread for a pair is simply the difference between the implied volatility of each leg, normalized:
IV Spread = IV_A / IV_A_historical_avg − IV_B / IV_B_historical_avg
Expressing each leg's IV relative to its own historical average removes the natural difference in baseline IV between stocks (a high-beta growth stock always has higher IV than a utility company — normalizing removes this structural gap).
A positive IV spread means Leg A is pricing in more uncertainty than usual relative to Leg B. A negative spread means Leg B is the "hot" leg from an options perspective.
The most useful application of IV spread is confirmation and direction guidance:
BetaWatchdog uses a three-gate model for pairs signal quality. All three gates must pass for a high-conviction signal:
When all three gates pass, the signal is high-quality. When only Gates 1 and 2 pass (IV spread neutral), the signal is valid but lower conviction. Pairs signals without Gate 2 (low health score) should be avoided regardless of z-score.
One practical use of IV spread is predicting how convergence will occur. The spread can mean-revert in two ways: the outperformer falls, or the underperformer rises. IV spread provides a hint:
This directional insight from IV spread helps with trade structuring — whether to weight the position more aggressively on the short side or the long side of the pairs trade.