Options Chart

GEX

Dealer Positioning

The market's hidden volatility amplifier or shock absorber

GEX (Gamma Exposure) measures the dollar value of stock dealers must buy or sell to stay delta-neutral as price moves $1. Positive GEX means dealers are net short gamma — they buy dips and sell rips, which suppresses volatility. Negative GEX means they chase price in the same direction, amplifying every move. It's the invisible hand behind calm vs chaotic markets.

Gamma and Why It Moves Markets

GEX is the market's shock absorber or its amplifier. When it's positive, the road is smooth. When it flips negative, every pothole becomes a crater.

Gamma is the rate at which an option's delta changes as the underlying moves. When a market maker sells you an option, they take on gamma risk — their delta changes as the stock moves, forcing them to constantly rebalance their hedge. This rebalancing is not optional. It is a mechanical obligation, and in aggregate it constitutes a significant fraction of daily equity volume in heavily optioned stocks and indices.

GEX totals up all of this mechanical buying and selling pressure. Positive GEX means dealers are collectively short options — they must buy when price falls and sell when it rises. This creates a natural dampening effect. Negative GEX reverses the dynamic: dealers are long options and must chase price in its direction of movement, amplifying every move.

The regime shift

Markets flip from positive to negative GEX regimes when enough put buying or short-dated option activity tilts dealer positioning. The GEX zero-cross is the level at which dealer behavior inverts — below it, volatility expands. Above it, volatility contracts. Identifying this level in real time gives you a structural edge in choosing between range-trading and directional strategies.

Positive GEX: The Calm Market

When net GEX is large and positive, the market tends to exhibit tight intraday ranges, rapid mean-reversion after spikes, and low realized volatility. This is the environment where premium sellers thrive — iron condors, short strangles, and covered calls all benefit from the mechanical support and resistance dealers provide. These periods can persist for weeks during low-volatility bull markets.

Negative GEX: When the Brakes Are Gone

Negative GEX is the environment professional traders respect most. When dealers are long gamma, they amplify rather than absorb moves. A down day becomes a sharp selloff. A short squeeze becomes parabolic. Stop-loss hunting becomes systematic. This is not sentiment — it is mechanical. In negative GEX regimes, widen your stops, reduce position size, and consider directional premium buying over short premium strategies.

How to read it

1
Start here Net GEX is positive

Low vol regime — dealers act as market stabilizers, buying dips and selling rallies

2
Net GEX is negative

High vol regime — dealers amplify moves; trending action, larger swings expected

3
Large GEX bar at a strike

Major pinning zone — price will stall or get drawn toward this level

Key takeaway GEX zero-cross level

The flip zone — once price crosses here, dealer behavior inverts and moves can accelerate dramatically