Key takeaways
- Net U.S. call option volume has collapsed to roughly 10,000 contracts per day, with puts overwhelming calls by more than 1.3 million contracts on a 5‑day basis—worse than at the April 2025 and August 2024 lows.
- This swing from call‑heavy speculation to put‑heavy hedging signals that big money is bracing for downside or at least more volatility, even as many retail accounts are still anchored to the bull market mindset.
- For small investors, this can be both a warning (don’t over‑leverage long) and an opportunity (watch for capitulation and eventual reversals in sectors where fear is peaking).
- Sector ETFs and AI‑driven trading bots like Tickeron’s can help you respond systematically—adjusting risk, identifying winner/loser sectors, and avoiding emotional trades in this options‑driven market regime.
What the options shift is really saying
From a retail perspective, the key story isn’t just “puts are up.” It’s that the balance between bullish and bearish options has swung to levels associated with prior capitulation points:
- Net call volume around 10,000 contracts per day—lowest since the April 2025 selloff.
- The 5‑day moving average of (calls minus puts) down about 1.3 million contracts since February.
- Put trading dominating since the Iran War began, with the current put‑call imbalance even more extreme than at the April 2025 (~‑1.1M) and August 2024 (~‑750k) bottoms.
When traders rush into puts and abandon calls, it usually means sentiment has flipped from “buy every dip” to “protect the downside at all costs.” That doesn’t guarantee an immediate bottom—but it does tell you we’re in a fear‑driven, options‑sensitive environment where flows can move prices as much as fundamentals.
How this hits sectors: where fear is most concentrated
Options activity tends to cluster in big, liquid names and sector ETFs. For a small investor, it helps to think in terms of winners/losers under a put‑heavy, volatility‑aware regime.
Tech and AI – still liquid, but no longer a one‑way call trade
These are where speculative calls used to concentrate. Now, more traders are using puts and spreads to hedge rich positions. That can mean:
- Larger intraday swings as hedging flows force dealers to sell futures or stock on down moves.
- Sharper bounces when put buyers take profits or shift to upside structures.
Retail takeaway: Tech is still the core of the growth story, but blindly buying short‑dated calls has become much riskier. If you want exposure, lean on stock/ETF positions or longer‑dated, defined‑risk options rather than weekly YOLOs.
Financials and cyclicals – options saying “watch the economy”
- ETFs: XLF (Financials), XLI (Industrials), XLY (Consumer Discretionary), IWM (Russell 2000).
- Key names: JPM, BAC, CAT, F, HD, small‑cap baskets via IWM.
Rising put volume here reflects worries about:
- Higher rates and credit risk (financials).
- Slower demand and margins (industrials, discretionary).
- Small caps getting squeezed by funding costs and weaker growth.
Retail takeaway: You don’t have to short everything, but you do want tighter risk controls on economically sensitive names—smaller position sizes, clearer stop levels, and less leverage.
Energy and commodities – hedged, but still a potential relative winner
- ETFs: XLE (Energy), XLB (Materials), broad commodity funds.
- Key names: XOM, CVX, COP, FCX.
War, inflation, and supply shocks make these sectors volatile, so hedging activity naturally rises. But structurally, higher commodity prices can still support revenues.
Retail takeaway: Expect choppiness, but energy/commodities can still be a net “winner” versus the broad market if inflation and geopolitical risk stay elevated. Don’t confuse more puts with a bearish fundamental story here—it’s often risk management around gains.
Real estate and rate‑sensitives – options say “handle with care”
- ETFs: XLRE (Real Estate), long‑duration growth and some speculative tech ETFs.
- Key names: PLD, O, certain high‑multiple, unprofitable tech names.
These are the classic losers when rates and volatility rise. Elevated put activity here is a red flag: the market is explicitly worried about valuation, refinancing, and growth assumptions.
Retail takeaway: Treat these as tactical trades, not core holdings, unless you have a long horizon and can handle drawdowns.
What a retail trader should actually do in this options regime
Instead of trying to front‑run every options flow, use the shift as a set of practical guidelines:
- Reduce leverage, extend time horizons.
- If you’re using a lot of short‑dated calls, consider moving to longer‑dated call spreads or simply stock/ETF positions.
- Avoid margin levels that would force you to sell into volatility spikes.
- If you’re using a lot of short‑dated calls, consider moving to longer‑dated call spreads or simply stock/ETF positions.
- Use ETFs as your battlefield, stocks for edges.
- Express macro views with liquid ETFs (SPY, QQQ, XLK, XLE, XLF, XLRE) where spreads and depth are better.
- Use single‑name options sparingly and only where you have a clear thesis.
- Express macro views with liquid ETFs (SPY, QQQ, XLK, XLE, XLF, XLRE) where spreads and depth are better.
- Recognize that extreme put imbalance can set up sharp reversals.
- Historically, when puts massively outweigh calls, markets often see violent short‑covering and dealer‑hedging rallies once the news flow stabilizes.
- Don’t assume a bottom, but be ready with a plan: what would you buy, and at what levels, if volatility begins to cool?
- Historically, when puts massively outweigh calls, markets often see violent short‑covering and dealer‑hedging rallies once the news flow stabilizes.
How Tickeron’s AI trading bots can help you navigate shifting options flows
In an environment where the options market is dominating price action, AI‑driven trading bots are particularly useful because they:
- Track trend and volatility across sectors in real time
- Bots can monitor SPY, QQQ, XLK, XLE, XLF, XLRE, IWM and others, flagging when trends strengthen, weaken, or reverse.
- They don’t need to “see” options flows directly—they react to the price/volume patterns those flows create.
- Bots can monitor SPY, QQQ, XLK, XLE, XLF, XLRE, IWM and others, flagging when trends strengthen, weaken, or reverse.
- Specialize in breakout/breakdown and mean‑reversion patterns
- Some bots are trend‑followers (riding downtrends while put demand dominates), others look for oversold bounces when selling exhausts.
- Each strategy has stats: win rate, average gain, average loss, helping you choose the style that fits your risk tolerance.
- Some bots are trend‑followers (riding downtrends while put demand dominates), others look for oversold bounces when selling exhausts.
- Automate risk management when emotions run high
- Bots enforce rules on position sizing, stop losses, and maximum drawdowns—exactly what many retail traders abandon during big losing streaks and option‑driven selloffs.
- Bots enforce rules on position sizing, stop losses, and maximum drawdowns—exactly what many retail traders abandon during big losing streaks and option‑driven selloffs.
A concrete approach for a small investor could be:
- Use a broad‑market bot to determine how much overall equity risk you should be carrying while options sentiment is extremely bearish.
- Add sector bots that tilt toward areas where patterns are improving (e.g., quality tech or energy) and away from names where breakdowns keep repeating (fragile cyclicals, weak real estate).
Let these AI tools handle the timing of incremental buys and sells, while you focus on the bigger picture: how much risk you’re comfortable with, and which themes you want to own when the current fear phase eventually breaks.
Tickeron AI Perspective