Hey, it's Don.
Most traders panic when the VIX hits 30. The smart ones load up.
The S&P 500 dropped another 1.5% Friday. The Nasdaq fell into correction territory.
The Dow briefly crossed the 10% drawdown line. Oil is above $96 and the VIX spiked past 30.
Everybody is freaking out.
I am not one of those people.
I just booked a 263% gain on a Broadcom butterfly Friday morning. Before that, 217% on Meta.
Before that, 281% on Tesla. Same strategy, same setup, every single time.
I won +71% of my Superfly trades last week.
You see, a VIX at 30 does not mean the opportunity is gone.
It means the setups are finally here.
What a 30 VIX Actually Means for Traders Like Me
I say this to my trading room constantly. There is no bullish or bearish.
There is only volatility.
When the VIX is at 30, the expected moves on big tech stocks get wide. Tesla might swing $20 overnight.
Broadcom might gap $15. Meta could pop $10 in either direction before you finish your coffee.
That is the entire game for my strategy.
I trade zero DTE butterfly spreads called Superfly. I place them the day before expiration and let the overnight session do the work.
Here is the key. These butterflies are cheap to put on.
We are talking 38 to 67 cents per contract. That is $38 to $67 of total risk on a one-lot.
Now, if you were buying outright calls or puts right now, the premiums would eat you alive. Implied volatility is sky high and you are paying for every cent of it.
That is the trap most traders fall into during a VIX spike. They pay up for directional bets and get crushed by theta and vol contraction.
Butterflies flip that equation on its head. You buy them cheap because the structure neutralizes the inflated vol.
Then the wide expected moves push price right into your target zone. Higher VIX means faster gains because the range is wider.
The Overnight Move Is Doing the Heavy Lifting
Most zero DTE traders are glued to their screens all day, trying to scalp directional moves in a market whipping 60 handles on Iran headlines. That is a losing game right now.
Superfly works differently.
I place a butterfly on Tuesday for Wednesday's expiration, Thursday for Friday, and Friday for Monday.
Three cycles a week. Then I go to sleep.
The overnight session is where these trades come alive. Stocks make their biggest moves while most people are in bed.
By the time the cash market opens, the butterfly has either hit or it has not. No staring at charts, no panic-selling because somebody tweeted.
Here is a real example from this week. On Thursday, I placed a Broadcom put butterfly for 55 cents.
Broadcom moved overnight. By Friday morning that butterfly was worth $2.00.
A 263% gain on 55 cents. While I was asleep.
The Numbers from the Last Few Weeks
Here is what this has looked like in the middle of the chaos:
- AVGO (3/27): Paid $0.55, closed at $2.00. Return: 263%.
- Tesla (3/11): Paid $0.55, closed at $2.10. Return: 281%.
- Meta (3/23): Paid $0.63, closed at $2.00. Return: 217%.
- Apple (3/13): Paid $0.38, closed at $1.20. Return: 215%.
- Tesla (3/20): Paid $0.50, closed at $1.34. Return: 168%.
- AVGO (3/25): Paid $0.67, closed at $1.38. Return: 105%.
- Tesla (3/25): Paid $0.65, closed at $1.35. Return: 107%.
Every one of those trades was placed the day before expiration and resolved overnight.
Not every trade hits. When a butterfly misses, it goes to zero.
I had a Google butterfly on for 67 cents this week that expired worthless. Gone.
Do I care? Not even a little.
The losses are measured in cents. The wins are measured in multiples.
I Don't Care Which Way the Market Goes
The number one question I get right now is "Don, which way is the market going?"
My answer: I do not care.
Thursday night I had a Broadcom put butterfly for a move lower. I also had a Google call butterfly for a move higher.
Both sides, trapped. If the market sold off, Broadcom hits.
If it rallied, Google hits.
Broadcom dropped and I collected 263%. Google expired worthless and I lost 67 cents.
That is a very good night.
I am not betting on Iran headlines or Fed policy or oil prices. I am betting that big tech stocks will move to their expected range.
In a 30 VIX environment, they are doing that almost every session.
Why the VIX at 30 Is a Green Light
When volatility is low, expected moves are tight. Stocks barely move overnight and butterflies have a harder time getting hit.
When volatility is high, like right now, everything changes.
Expected moves get wider. Stocks are swinging hard overnight on Iran news, oil moves, and geopolitical chaos.
The butterflies are getting hit more frequently because the range is finally wide enough to reach the target zones.
At the same time, the butterflies stay cheap. You are not paying the inflated premium that call and put buyers are getting destroyed by.
This is the environment where the math stacks up the hardest. I hit three out of five Superfly trades in a single week recently.
Even hitting one out of three is profitable over time given the risk-to-reward. When you are hitting three out of five, you are crushing it.
43 Trades In. Here's What I've Learned.
I have placed 43 Superfly trades since launching this about seven weeks ago. I started in beta, firing trades live while I figured out which names work best.
Tesla has been a gift. It overshoots its expected move constantly.
Broadcom keeps delivering. Three sessions in a row it hit the upper edge of its expected move heading into this week.
Apple trends well even though it is lower volatility. Meta has produced some of the biggest overnight pops.
Amazon was a dud. Took me a couple trades to figure out I do not like it, so I dropped it.
The cumulative P/L is solidly positive, and I have been getting better every week. The VIX at 30 is making it work even faster.
The Setup Right Now
The S&P 500 is on its fifth straight weekly decline. That has not happened since 2022.
The Nasdaq is in correction. Traders are pricing in a rate hike for the first time.
Oil supply fears are not going away. This volatility is not a one-day event.
Nearly 60% of all daily options volume is in zero DTE. On Fridays, that number hits 80%.
The exchanges just added three-times-a-week expirations on Tesla, Broadcom, Meta, Apple, Nvidia, and others. The opportunity set keeps expanding.
Every night you wait, expected moves are firing. Every morning you wake up, butterflies are resolving.
The VIX at 30 is not a warning sign for this strategy. It is a green light.
I am going to keep placing these trades three times a week. Small risk, defined outcomes, triple-digit upside.
Don't hate the player. Hate the game.
Now, here is what I want you to do. I am hosting a free live training on Tuesday, March 31 at 1 PM ET.
I am going to walk you through the entire Superfly approach step by step. You will see why I believe the real market opens at 4 PM, not 9:30 AM.
Most traders shut down when the closing bell rings. That is exactly when I start looking for my next setup.
The window between 4 PM and 9:30 AM is where the biggest overnight moves take shape. It is also the window that almost nobody is paying attention to.
In this session, I am going to show you what I look for before the close, how I position for the overnight move, and why this approach takes most of the stress and screen-watching out of zero DTE trading.
I will also break down recent trades like the 282% winner on Tesla in 24 hours and the 311% gain on Meta in 72 hours. You will see exactly how those setups formed.
This training is limited to 500 spots and I am not recording it. Some of the most important details will only be covered live.
If you have been reading this and wondering how to actually do this yourself, Tuesday is your shot.
Register now and save your seat.
To your success,
Don Kaufman
Chief Market Strategist, TheoTRADE
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