Options Chart

Volume

Market Activity

Today's trading activity — where the action is right now

Volume counts every options contract that changed hands today. It resets to zero each morning, making it a real-time pulse of the market. Volume alone doesn't tell you direction, but which strikes are lighting up reveals where smart money is moving. Unusually high volume at a specific strike often precedes a big move.

Why Volume Matters

Volume is the heartbeat of the options market. Fast pulse means something's happening. Flat pulse means nobody cares — yet.

Volume shows which price levels traders are actually interested in — not just theoretically, but with real money. High volume around a strike or price level signals genuine conviction, while thin volume suggests speculative noise. For options traders, volume is one of the first filters for separating meaningful activity from background chatter.

Volume also reflects liquidity. Strikes with high volume are easier to enter and exit — tighter spreads, faster fills. Strikes with low volume carry hidden costs: wide bid-ask spreads and slippage that erode edge before a trade even begins. Always check volume before sizing into an options position.

Key distinction

Volume resets to zero every morning. Open Interest does not. Volume tells you what's happening today. Open Interest tells you what has accumulated over time. Used together, they reveal whether today's activity represents new conviction or just position management.

Volume vs. Open Interest

When volume at a strike significantly exceeds its open interest, it usually means fresh positions are being opened — not old ones being rolled or closed. This distinction matters: a strike with 10,000 volume but only 2,000 open interest suggests that 8,000 contracts changed hands as new bets, not as housekeeping. That's the signal worth acting on.

Conversely, when volume is high but open interest barely changes, it indicates day-trading activity — positions opened and closed within the session. These moves can still indicate where traders see value, but they don't represent durable positioning the way rising open interest does.

Unusual Options Activity

When volume at a single strike is 5–10× its typical daily average, experienced traders call this "unusual options activity" — and pay close attention. While it doesn't guarantee an informed trade, statistically outsized volume at specific strikes before earnings, FDA decisions, or macro events has historically preceded significant directional moves. It is not a signal to blindly follow, but it is a signal worth investigating.

How to read it

1
Start here High call volume above spot

Bullish positioning or hedging short exposure — someone is betting on upside

2
High put volume below spot

Bearish bet or portfolio hedge — someone is buying downside protection

3
Volume >> open interest

New positions opening today, not old ones being closed — significant fresh conviction

Key takeaway Same strike busy across multiple days

That level is structurally significant — watch it closely