Options riskIntermediate

Gap Risk

Gap risk is the danger that a market opens at a price far from its previous close, jumping past any stop-loss so that the realised loss is set by the gap rather than the stop level, an effect amplified in leveraged and short-option positions.

Quick answer: Gap risk is the danger that a market opens at a price far from its previous close, jumping past any stop-loss so that the realised loss is set by the gap rather than the stop level, an effect amplified in leveraged and short-option positions.

In simple words

A stop-loss only works if the market trades through your level; if the market gaps, opening well beyond it, your order fills at the open price, not the stop. Gap risk is the danger of these jumps, which happen overnight or over a weekend when news arrives while the market is closed. For options, gaps are especially punishing because leverage and gamma turn a jump in the underlying into a much larger jump in the option's value. A gap is exactly the scenario in which your planned loss becomes a floor you can breach, not a guarantee.

Purpose

This page explains why a gap defeats a stop-loss and why options magnify the effect, so a trader sizes for the gap rather than trusting the stop level as a maximum loss.

Visual explanation

Gap Risk

A return distribution with fat tails: most days cluster near zero, but overnight gaps produce rare large jumps far from the centre.

Return Distributionmeanlossesgainsfat left tailreturn per period →

Professional explanation

A gap defeats the stop-loss

A stop-loss is an instruction to exit when the price reaches a level, but it can only fill at a price the market actually trades. When the market gaps, opening well above or below the prior close because news arrived while it was shut, the first available price is beyond the stop, and the order fills there. The consequence is that the realised loss is determined by the gap, not by where you placed the stop, so a stop calculated to risk 1 percent can produce a much larger loss on a gap open. This is the central lesson of gap risk: a stop bounds the loss only in a continuously trading market, and gaps are precisely when it fails.

Why options amplify gaps

Options magnify a gap in the underlying through leverage and gamma. Because a small premium controls a large notional, a percentage jump in the underlying is a much larger percentage change in the option's value, and for a short option the loss is convex, accelerating with the size of the move. A gap that takes the underlying through a short strike overnight can turn a modest premium into a multiple-of-premium loss on the opening print, with no opportunity to have adjusted in between. The same gap also usually comes with a volatility spike, so vega adds to the loss for a short-premium seller. Options do not just inherit gap risk; they compound it.

Where gaps come from in the Indian market

Indian equity gaps commonly arise from developments while the cash market is closed: overnight moves in US markets, global risk events, changes in crude or the rupee, company results announced after hours, and domestic policy or geopolitical news over a weekend. Because the NSE cash session is closed for many hours each day and over weekends, information accumulates and is expressed as a jump at the next open rather than a smooth intraday drift. Event dates, results seasons and global-shock periods raise the probability and size of gaps, which is why overnight and weekend exposure is a distinct risk from intraday movement.

Sizing for the gap, not the stop

The correct response to gap risk is to size the position so that a plausible adverse gap, not the stop distance, is a survivable fraction of capital. This means estimating a realistic overnight jump, for example a few percent in the index or more around events, and checking that the loss at that gap stays within your risk budget. For short options it means treating the position's worst-case gap loss, magnified by gamma and vega, as the sizing input rather than the premium or the stop. Reducing size, using defined-risk spreads that cap the gap loss, and trimming exposure ahead of known event dates are the practical tools, because you cannot rely on a stop to save you across a gap.

Gaps, fat tails and the limits of stops

Gap risk is a concrete expression of the fat tails in market returns: real distributions produce large jumps far more often than a normal model predicts, and those jumps mostly occur across the closed market. This is why treating the stop level as the maximum possible loss is a dangerous simplification, and why risk measures based on continuous trading, including some Value at Risk estimates, understate gap-driven losses. The honest position is that a stop is a plan for an orderly market and a gap is the disorderly case it does not cover, so survival depends on sizing that assumes gaps will happen, not on stops that assume they will not.

Intraday stop-out vs overnight gap

AspectIntraday move through stopOvernight gap past stop
Fill priceAt or near the stop levelAt the gapped open, beyond the stop
Realised lossRoughly the planned riskSet by the gap, can far exceed the plan
Chance to adjustYes, market is tradingNo, market was closed
Option effectContained by the stopAmplified by gamma and a vol spike
Main defenceThe stop itselfSmaller size and defined-risk structures

Practical example

Illustrative example (Indian market)

A trader with Rs 5,00,000 is short 3 lots of a Nifty put with the index at 25,000, having placed a mental stop to exit if Nifty falls to 24,800, expecting to lose about Rs 15,000 there. Overnight, a global risk-off event drives US markets sharply lower, and Nifty gaps down to open at 24,500, 300 points below the stop level with no chance to exit in between. The short put, pushed deep in the money by the gap and repriced higher by a India VIX spike, loses far more than the planned Rs 15,000, perhaps Rs 45,000 or more once gamma and vega are counted, roughly 9 percent of capital from a single overnight gap. The stop was never the maximum loss; the gap was, and only smaller size or a bought protective wing would have contained it.

Because the NSE cash market is closed overnight and over weekends while US markets, crude, the rupee and global news keep moving, Nifty and Bank Nifty regularly gap at the open, and India VIX often jumps alongside. A short-option seller who sized to a stop rather than to a plausible gap can find the opening print has already taken a multiple of the intended loss before any order could act.

Limitations

  • A stop-loss cannot cap a loss across a gap, so the planned risk is only a floor
  • Estimating a plausible gap size is uncertain and tail events can exceed any estimate
  • Gaps often coincide with volatility spikes, so vega adds to the gap loss unpredictably
  • Hedges placed the prior session can themselves gap, changing the net protection
  • Continuous-trading risk measures like standard Value at Risk understate gap-driven losses

Common mistakes

  • Treating the stop level as the maximum loss when a gap can open far beyond it
  • Sizing off the stop distance instead of a plausible adverse overnight gap
  • Carrying large short-option exposure over weekends and known event dates
  • Ignoring that a gap in the underlying is magnified by gamma and vega in an option
  • Relying on a mental or hard stop to protect a position while the market is closed
  • Underestimating gap frequency because most days do not gap, forgetting the fat tail

Professional usage

Desks manage gap risk by assuming the market will gap and sizing for it. They stress positions against realistic overnight and event gaps, cap short-option exposure carried over weekends and around scheduled events, and prefer defined-risk structures whose loss is bounded whatever the open. They treat the stop as a plan for orderly trading and the gap as the disorderly case it does not cover, so the real defence is size and structure, not the stop level.

Key takeaways

  • A gap opens beyond your stop, so the loss is set by the gap, not the stop level
  • Options amplify gaps through leverage, gamma and an accompanying volatility spike
  • Indian gaps come from overnight global moves, events and weekend news while the market is shut
  • Size for a plausible adverse gap and use defined-risk structures, because a stop cannot cover a gap

Frequently asked questions

What is gap risk?
Gap risk is the danger that a market opens at a price far from its previous close, jumping past any stop-loss so the order fills at the gapped open rather than the stop level. The realised loss is then set by the gap, which can far exceed the planned risk.
Why doesn't my stop-loss protect me against a gap?
Because a stop can only fill at a price the market actually trades, and a gap means the first available price is already beyond your stop. The order fills at the gapped open, so the stop bounds losses only in a continuously trading market, not across a gap.
Why are gaps worse for options?
Options magnify a gap through leverage and gamma: a percentage jump in the underlying is a larger percentage change in the option, and a short option's loss is convex, accelerating with the move. A gap usually also spikes volatility, adding a vega loss for short-premium sellers.
Where do market gaps come from?
From information arriving while the market is closed: overnight moves in US markets, global risk events, changes in crude or the rupee, after-hours company results, and weekend policy or geopolitical news. The closed market cannot adjust, so the news is expressed as a jump at the next open.
How do I protect against gap risk?
Size the position so a plausible adverse gap, not the stop distance, is a survivable fraction of capital, use defined-risk spreads that cap the gap loss, and trim exposure ahead of weekends and known events. A stop cannot cover a gap, so size and structure are the real defences.
Should I size off my stop or off a possible gap?
Off a plausible gap. Sizing off the stop distance assumes the market trades through your level, but a gap can open well beyond it. Estimating a realistic overnight jump and checking the loss at that gap keeps the position survivable.
Do gaps happen often in the Indian market?
Regularly, because the NSE cash market is closed overnight and over weekends while global markets, crude, the rupee and news keep moving. Most days the gap is small, but event dates and global shocks produce large gaps, which is the fat tail that matters.
Does a gap also affect implied volatility?
Usually yes. A gap driven by a shock is typically accompanied by a spike in India VIX, so a short-premium seller suffers a vega loss on top of the directional gap loss. The two effects compound, which is why gaps are especially punishing for sellers.
Can Value at Risk capture gap risk?
Standard Value at Risk based on continuous trading tends to understate gap-driven losses, because gaps are tail events that exceed the modelled quantile. VaR is a useful guide for orderly markets but must be supplemented with explicit gap and event stress testing.
Is gap risk the same as overnight risk?
They overlap. Overnight risk is the broad exposure of holding a position while the market is closed; gap risk is specifically the danger that the next open jumps past your levels. A gap is the most damaging way overnight risk materialises, but overnight risk also includes news, margin and liquidity effects.
How big a gap should I plan for?
There is no fixed figure, but a prudent approach stresses against a few percent in the index on an ordinary night and a larger jump around events and global shocks. Treat any estimate as approximate and size so that even a gap beyond your estimate remains survivable, since tails exceed models.
Do defined-risk spreads help against gaps?
Yes. A spread's long leg caps the loss whatever the open, so a gap cannot push the loss beyond the spread's width. This is one of the most reliable defences against gap risk, because unlike a stop it does not depend on the market trading at a particular level.
Why do most people underestimate gap risk?
Because most days do not gap meaningfully, so the risk is invisible in ordinary experience and feels theoretical. The danger sits in the fat tail, the occasional large overnight jump, which is rare enough to be forgotten but severe enough to cause a large loss when it arrives.
Can I avoid gap risk by trading only intraday?
Closing positions before the session ends removes overnight and weekend gap exposure, which is why some traders are strictly intraday. It does not remove the small risk of an intraday gap after a trading halt or a fast news move, but it eliminates the larger overnight and weekend gaps.

Voice search & related questions

Natural-language questions people ask about Gap Risk.

What is gap risk?
It is the risk that the market opens far from where it closed, jumping past your stop. Your order fills at the gapped open, so your loss can be much bigger than planned.
Why didn't my stop-loss work overnight?
Because a stop only fills at a price the market trades. If the market gaps open beyond your stop, it fills at that worse price, not at your level.
Why are gaps so bad for options?
Options are leveraged, so a jump in the index becomes a much bigger jump in the option, and volatility usually spikes too. For short options the loss can be many times the premium.
Where do gaps come from?
From news while the market is closed, overnight US moves, crude and rupee swings, results after hours, or weekend events. The market catches up all at once at the next open.
How do I protect against gaps?
Trade smaller, use spreads that cap the loss whatever the open, and cut risk before weekends and big events. A stop cannot save you across a gap, so size is the real defence.
Is holding overnight riskier than intraday?
Yes, because the market can gap while it is closed and you cannot react. Closing before the session ends removes that overnight and weekend gap risk.

Sources & references

    Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Markets and rules change; verify current conventions with SEBI, NSE/BSE and your broker.

    Educational content only — not investment advice. Examples use illustrative numbers and simplified models. Risk-management techniques reduce but never remove risk, and trading derivatives involves substantial risk of loss. See our Risk Disclosure and SEBI Disclaimer.