The "Buy low volatility and sell high volaitility" is one of those simplistic generalizations that seminar clowns and book writers trot out. It's a bit like buy low, sell high when talking about trading stocks. What is low and what is high?
An easy thing to determine... in retrospect.
If you see high implied volatility, ask yourself why this is so. The theory is that volatility is mean reverting and high volatility will cycle back to low volatility in some sort of dependable rhythm.
It ain't necessarily so. Volatility can stay high for a very long time. High IVs can also mean the market is expecting some sort of violent move and pricing that in (eg earnings, FDA approvals etc).
Therefore, high volatility is not an automatic sell, nor is low vol an automatic buy, because as No Village Idiot points out, volatility does not exist in a vaccuum, it is just one consideration.
village idiot said:
worked 'what if" examples like that are the best way IMO to get your head round it. I recommend you should do lots of them, on every concept you can think of
Could not agree more. Get a modeler, Hoadley or whatever, learn how to use it and do as VI suggests, all the while watching real markets and how IV changes in reaction to movement and information.