Why Walls Form
OI Walls are invisible brick walls in the market. You can't see them on a price chart, but they're the reason certain levels hold again and again.
OI walls emerge when a large number of contracts accumulate at a single strike across many expiries. This happens for structural reasons: institutions running covered calls at round numbers, portfolio managers buying puts at key support levels, or market makers taking on large positions to fill institutional order flow. The result is a strike with so much open interest that dealer hedging at that level becomes a self-reinforcing mechanical force.
The mechanics are straightforward. A market maker short a large call position at a given strike must sell stock as price approaches — to delta-hedge. The more calls they are short, the more stock they sell, and the more that selling pressure resists upward movement. This is the wall. It is not sentiment, it is arithmetic.
Wall breaks are some of the most powerful moves in options-driven markets. When price clears a major call wall, all the dealers who were selling stock to hedge suddenly need to buy it back. Combined with the short sellers who were using the wall as a ceiling, the resulting squeeze can be violent and fast. Always watch for volume confirmation when price is testing a wall.
Walls Across Expiries
OI walls aggregate across all expiry dates, which gives them a structural quality that single-expiry OI charts lack. A level with concentrated OI across three or four different expiries represents a true market consensus about significance — not a positioning artifact of one expiry cycle.
The strongest walls are typically found at round numbers (psychological levels), at prior earnings gap fills, and at all-time high or low levels. These coincide with strikes where the most retail and institutional option activity naturally concentrates.