Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company (HPE) Volatility Skew
Implied volatility skew shows how IV varies across strike prices for a given expiration. Steeper skews indicate higher demand for downside protection relative to upside speculation.
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company (HPE) operates in the Technology sector, specifically the Communication Equipment industry, with a market capitalization near $42.57B, listed on NYSE, employing roughly 61,000 people, carrying a beta of 1.29 to the broader market. Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company provides solutions that allow customers to capture, analyze, and act upon data seamlessly in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, the Asia Pacific, and Japan. Led by Antonio Fabio Neri, public since 2015-10-19.
Snapshot as of May 15, 2026.
- Spot Price
- $33.14
- ATM IV
- 61.1%
- IV Skew 25Δ
- -0.039
- IV Rank
- 76.1%
- IV Percentile
- 98.0%
- Term Structure Slope
- -0.009
As of May 15, 2026, Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company (HPE) at-the-money implied volatility is 61.1%. IV rank is 76.1% (where 0% is the 52-week low and 100% is the 52-week high). IV percentile is 98.0%. The 25-delta skew is -0.039: puts carry meaningful premium over calls, a classic equity downside-protection skew. High IV rank typically favors premium-selling strategies; low IV rank favors premium-buying.
HPE Strategy Selection at Current Volatility Levels
For Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company options at 61.1% ATM IV, high IV rank (76.1%) favors premium-selling structures: credit spreads, iron condors, covered calls, cash-secured puts. The risk: a continued vol expansion through high-rank levels is rare but expensive when it happens. The 25-delta skew is meaningfully put-skewed, so put-credit spreads capture more premium for the same width than call-credit spreads. Pair the vol-rank read with the dealer-gamma view and the upcoming-events calendar to confirm the strategy fits both the structural regime and the path-dependent risk. The variance risk premium - the persistent gap between implied and subsequently realized vol - is positive in equity markets on average; high IV rank typically reflects a stretch where the premium is wider than usual.
Learn how volatility skew is reported and how to read the data →
HPE highest implied-volatility contracts
| Type | Strike | Expiration | Volume | OI | IV | Bid | Ask |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PUT | $22.00 | Mar 19, 2027 | 20.8K | 20.8K | 59.0% | $1.54 | $2.02 |
Top 1 contracts from the ORATS-sourced nightly scan; ranked by iv within the broader S&P 500/400/600 + ETF universe.
Frequently asked HPE volatility skew questions
- What is the current HPE ATM implied volatility?
- As of May 15, 2026, Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company (HPE) at-the-money implied volatility is 61.1%. IV rank is 76.1% on a 0-100% scale anchored to the 1-year IV range. ATM IV is the volatility input that makes a Black-Scholes-equivalent model reproduce the listed at-the-money option prices.
- Is HPE IV high or low historically?
- IV is elevated relative to its 1-year history, conditions that typically favor premium-selling strategies (credit spreads, iron condors, covered calls).
- What does HPE volatility skew tell options traders?
- Volatility skew is the pattern by which IV varies across strikes for a given expiration. Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company carries the typical equity downside-protection skew: 25-delta puts price meaningfully richer than 25-delta calls. Skew matters for risk-defined strategy selection: when downside puts are rich, put-credit spreads capture more premium; when upside calls are rich, call-credit spreads or covered-call writes harvest more.