What ROST Options Know That The Stock Price Won’t Tell You

ROST: Ross Stores logo
ROST
Ross Stores

Markets don’t lie. Ross Stores (ROST) trades around $211.76 today, but options on ROST tell a deeper story about where it could go.

The options market is pricing a 68% chance ROST closes between $160 and $285 over roughly the next year, a range of roughly -25.6% to +34.4% from today’s price. Flip that around and the tail risk becomes visible: a 16% chance ROST lands below $160, and the same 16% chance it ends above $285.

That downside would be a significant drop. Smart money prepares for these swings in various ways; everyday ROST holders need to know what risk they own. While we unpack the hidden risk using option IV below, understanding what drove ROST stock price recently can provide much needed fundamental lens.

Trefis: ROST Stock Insights

The Power of Implied Volatility

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Options expiring roughly a year from now carry a number called Implied Volatility (IV). ROST’s IV sits at 32.0%. IV is the market’s ‘anxiety’ premium. It doesn’t predict direction; it prices how far traders expect the stock to swing.

High IV relative to historical means Wall Street is bracing for catalysts that could reprice the stock. Such catalysts are not always positive, they can be negative too. See how negative catalysts have crashed ROST stock in the past.

The Move Priced In

Stocks move asymmetrically, implying that the while the downside is limited, upside is not. Here is how the probabilities and potential move look like:

  • 68% Zone: ROST closes between $160 and $285 (-25.6% to +34.4% from today’s $211.76).
  • 16% Melt-Up: stock breaks above $285.
  • 16% Collapse: stock breaks below $160.

The formula: current price × e±IV × √(days/365). Maps to an upper bound of $285 (up $72.77) and a lower bound of $160 (down $54.16).

Why It Matters

The expected move gives us the structural roadmap, but the forward number only matters when we compare it against how ROST has actually behaved.

Historical volatility comes in at 24.9% versus 32.0% implied, a ratio of 1.28x. Implied volatility is sitting meaningfully above historical. Part of this is the standard ‘fear premium,’ but a gap this wide suggests traders are pricing in more than business-as-usual over the coming period.

So what can you do? If you believe this turbulence will subside, one way to trade is by ‘selling OTM put options’.

How Smart Money Is Betting

Formulas assume symmetric swings. Institutional capital rarely bets that way. Premiums are balanced between downside ($5.8 put at $160) and upside ($6.25 call at $280) at equivalent probability distances. No meaningful directional skew.

The Takeaway

Buying and holding ROST today means preparing for a notable $125-wide price track. You don’t need to be an options trader to use this data: the 1 standard deviation move gives you the real risk-to-reward window Wall Street has priced in. If a drop to $160 would rattle you, your position size may be too large. If you believe ROST’s tailwinds push it past $285, the market may be underestimating it.

Wealth preservation means seeing how options-implied risks stack across a portfolio. If ROST’s volatility profile doesn’t fit your mandate, explore alternatives with asymmetric risk-reward. For cross-asset allocation, see our Wealth Management Solution.