OptionsFlow — Learn

Options Flow & Dealer Analytics — From Zero to Advanced

Everything I've learned about GEX, dealer positioning, Vanna, Charm and reading the NSE options market structure — written in plain language. Start from Article 1 if you're new, or jump to wherever you need.

Level 0 — Start Here · Complete Beginner
01
Beginner · 5 min read

Calls, Puts and How NSE Options Actually Work

Before GEX, before flow data — you need this. What a call is, what a put is, who writes them and why. Explained with real Nifty examples.

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02
Beginner · 5 min read

Open Interest: The Number Everyone Watches But Few Understand

OI is not volume. Most traders get this wrong. Here's what open interest actually tells you — and more importantly, what it doesn't.

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03
Beginner · 6 min read

Delta and Gamma Without the Maths — What They Actually Mean

You've seen these words everywhere. Here's what delta and gamma mean in plain language — and why gamma specifically is the key to understanding everything else on this dashboard.

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Level 1 — GEX & Dealer Mechanics
04
Foundations · 8 min read

What Is Gamma Exposure (GEX) and Why Every Trader Should Know It

GEX is the single most important structural force in modern index options markets. Here's what it is, why it matters, and how to read the chart.

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05
Deep Dive · 7 min read

Dealer Positioning Decoded: How Probable GEX Is Calculated

Not all open interest is the same. Learn how we separate writers from buyers, why that difference changes the GEX chart, and what it means for price movement.

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06
Greeks · 6 min read

Vanna and Charm: The Greeks That Move Markets at Expiry

Delta hedging doesn't stop with gamma. Vanna and Charm cause systematic flows every day near expiry — and they can explain moves that look random on the surface.

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Level 2 — Reading the Dashboard Tools
07
Indicator · 5 min read

Put-Call Ratio (PCR): What It Actually Tells You About Nifty Direction

PCR is one of the most misread indicators in Indian markets. Here's the right way to use it — and the common mistake that trips up most traders.

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08
Structure · 6 min read

Call Wall & Put Wall: Options-Based Support and Resistance That Actually Works

Price levels from options OI are not the same as technical support and resistance. Here's why the Call Wall and Put Wall are structurally significant — and when they break.

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09
Key Level · 5 min read

Zero Gamma Line: The Most Important Level on the Entire Chart

The ZGL is where dealer behaviour flips completely. Above it, markets dampen. Below it, moves amplify. Once you understand this line, you'll look at Nifty differently.

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10
Volatility · 7 min read

Reading the Volatility Skew: What OTM Puts and Calls Are Really Saying

The implied volatility smile tells a story about fear, positioning and probability. Here's how to read the delta-based skew table and what different patterns mean.

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11
Volatility · 5 min read

The Vol Surface Explained: What That 3D Chart Is Actually Showing You

Most people skip the vol surface. That's a mistake. It's the most complete picture of where IV is expensive, cheap and distorted — across every strike and expiry at once.

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Level 3 — Advanced Context & Live Application
12
Volatility · 6 min read

India VIX: How Fear Connects to Your Dashboard Data

VIX is not just a fear gauge. It has a direct mechanical relationship with dealer hedging flows. Understanding this connection makes GEX and VEX data much more actionable.

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13
Expiry · 6 min read

Weekly vs Monthly Expiry: How GEX Behaviour Changes Across Cycles

The same GEX reading means something different on a weekly expiry vs a monthly one. Here's why — and how to adjust your interpretation based on where you are in the cycle.

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14
User Guide · 9 min read

How to Use This Dashboard: A Walkthrough of Every Chart and Number

A practical guide to the OI Monitor, GEX charts, Probable Positioning, the Synopsis card and what to do with each piece of information.

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15
Live Example · 8 min read

A Real Trade Setup: GEX + PCR + VEX Working Together

Everything from the previous 14 articles — applied to a single real setup. This is what the analysis actually looks like in practice, before the market opens.

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Beginner · Article 1 of 15 · 5 min read

Calls, Puts and How NSE Options Actually Work

OptionsFlowFoundations5 min read

I get asked this a lot — "boss, explain options from scratch." So let me do exactly that before we get into GEX, dealer flows, or any of the advanced stuff. If you already know what a call and put is, skip to Article 4. But if there's any doubt at all, spend 5 minutes here. Everything else on this dashboard builds on this.

What Is an Option?

An option is a contract that gives you the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell something at a fixed price before a certain date. That's the textbook definition. In real terms for the NSE: you're buying or selling the right to transact in Nifty, BankNifty, or a stock — at a specific strike price — by a specific expiry date.

The key word is "right." You're not forced to do anything. You can let the option expire worthless if it's not in your favour. The most you can lose as a buyer is the premium you paid.

Call Options

A call option gives you the right to buy the underlying at the strike price. If you buy a Nifty 24,000 call, you have the right to buy Nifty at 24,000 — regardless of where it's actually trading. If Nifty goes to 24,500, your call is worth at least 500 points. If Nifty stays below 24,000, the call expires worthless and you lose the premium.

Who buys calls? Usually traders who think the market will go up. Who sells calls? Usually traders who think the market won't go above a certain level — they collect the premium and hope the call expires worthless.

Put Options

A put option gives you the right to sell the underlying at the strike price. A Nifty 23,500 put gives you the right to sell Nifty at 23,500 — even if the market falls to 22,000. Protective puts are used heavily by institutions to hedge their portfolios. That structural demand is actually one of the reasons puts are almost always more expensive than equivalent calls — something we'll come back to in Article 10.

Writers vs Buyers — This Distinction Matters

Every option transaction has two sides: a buyer who pays premium and gets the right, and a writer (seller) who receives premium and takes on the obligation. The writer of a call is obligated to sell the underlying if the buyer exercises. The writer of a put is obligated to buy it.

This distinction matters enormously for this dashboard. Most of the GEX and flow analysis depends on figuring out who is on which side — because writers and buyers create completely opposite hedging dynamics for the market maker in the middle. We'll get into that properly in Article 4.

Expiry and Strike

Every NSE option has two key parameters. The strike price is the price at which the right can be exercised. The expiry date is when the contract ends. Currently Nifty has weekly expiries (every Thursday) and monthly expiries (last Thursday of the month). BankNifty had weekly expiries that have since been modified — always check the NSE calendar for current expiry schedule.

Options that are likely to expire with value (strike is near or favourable to current price) are called in the money (ITM). Options far from current price that will likely expire worthless are out of the money (OTM). The strike closest to current price is at the money (ATM).

Quick recap: Call = right to buy. Put = right to sell. Buyer pays premium, gets the right. Writer receives premium, takes the obligation. Everything on this dashboard — GEX, VEX, PCR — comes from analysing the options chain built from millions of these contracts outstanding at any point in time.

Interested in learning this with the analyst? See the Mentorship page for session details and pricing.

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Beginner · Article 2 of 15 · 5 min read

Open Interest: The Number Everyone Watches But Few Understand

OptionsFlowFoundations5 min read

Walk into any trading room in India and you'll hear people say "OI build-up at 24,000 calls" or "heavy put writing at 23,500." OI — open interest — is one of the most-watched numbers in the entire F&O market. It's also one of the most misunderstood. I want to clear up the confusion here because everything on this dashboard is built on OI data.

What Open Interest Actually Is

Open interest is the total number of outstanding contracts that have not been settled. That's it. When you buy a Nifty call and someone else sells it to you (writes it), one new contract is created. OI goes up by one. When either of you closes the position — you sell your call back, or the writer buys it back — OI goes down by one. OI is a running count of "live" contracts at any given moment.

OI Is Not Volume

This is where most people trip up. Volume counts every transaction that happens during the day — buy, sell, doesn't matter. OI only counts contracts that are still open. You can have massive volume with no change in OI (if everyone who buys also sells on the same day), or you can have modest volume with a big OI change (if everyone who buys holds overnight).

Volume tells you activity. OI tells you commitment. For dealer flow analysis, we care about OI — it represents actual positions, actual hedging obligations, actual structural levels.

Why OI Concentrations Create Price Levels

When a lot of OI builds up at a particular strike, it's not just a number — it represents a large number of people who are either obligated to buy or sell at that price, or who have paid for the right to do so. Market makers who wrote those contracts are continuously delta-hedging them. The result is that high-OI strikes become structural price levels — they attract price near expiry because of the mechanical hedging activity clustered there. We'll quantify exactly how much in Article 4 (GEX).

OI Changes — The Most Important Signal

The absolute OI number matters less than how it's changing. OI rising means new positions being opened — fresh conviction, new hedges, new writing activity. OI falling means positions being closed — people taking profits, covering, or rolling to the next expiry. The combination of OI change direction + price change direction + IV change direction is the core of what the Probable GEX analysis (Article 5) tries to decode.

The key insight: OI build-up at a strike doesn't tell you who built it or why. A big OI number could be institutional writers collecting premium, or retail buyers speculating on a breakout. The answer changes the entire interpretation. That's exactly the problem our dashboard's Probable GEX tries to solve.

PCR — The First OI Ratio

The Put-Call Ratio (which gets its own article — Article 7) is simply total put OI divided by total call OI. It's the first ratio most traders look at when checking the NSE option chain. A PCR above 1 means more puts outstanding than calls. What that actually means for direction is more nuanced than most people think — but we'll get there in order.

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Beginner · Article 3 of 15 · 6 min read

Delta and Gamma Without the Maths — What They Actually Mean

OptionsFlowThe Greeks6 min read

The "Greeks" are just sensitivity measures. Each one tells you how an option's price responds to a change in something — the underlying price, time, volatility, etc. We only need two of them right now: delta and gamma. These two completely determine how market makers hedge their books — which is the foundation of everything on this dashboard.

Delta — The Hedge Ratio

Delta tells you how much an option's price moves when the underlying moves by 1 point. A delta of 0.5 means if Nifty goes up 100 points, your call goes up approximately 50 points. Simple enough.

For call options, delta is always between 0 and 1. For put options, it's between -1 and 0 (puts gain value when the underlying falls). A deep ITM call has a delta close to 1 — it moves almost exactly like the underlying. A far OTM call has a delta close to 0 — it barely moves at all.

Here's the market-maker implication: if a market maker sells you a call with delta 0.5, they need to buy 0.5 units of Nifty futures to stay neutral (delta-hedge). They are not taking a directional bet — they are neutralising their exposure. This buying is mechanical and automatic.

Why Delta Changes — And Why That Matters

Delta is not fixed. It changes constantly as the underlying moves. As Nifty rises, your ATM call's delta might go from 0.5 to 0.6 to 0.7. This means the market maker who sold it to you must continuously buy more futures to keep up with the changing delta. When Nifty falls, delta falls and they must sell futures. This constant adjustment is called delta hedging, and it is the primary source of mechanical flow in the F&O market.

Gamma — The Rate of Change of Delta

Gamma measures how fast delta changes. High gamma = delta changes quickly. Low gamma = delta changes slowly. That's the entire definition.

ATM options have the highest gamma. As options move far in or out of the money, gamma drops toward zero. This makes intuitive sense — a deep ITM option already has delta close to 1, so there's not much room for delta to increase further. A far OTM option has a delta near 0, and a small move in the underlying doesn't change that much.

The Market Maker Problem With Gamma

The higher the gamma of an option, the more frequently the market maker must adjust their hedge. High gamma = expensive to hedge = fast-moving delta = constant rebalancing. This is why market makers who are short gamma (they've sold options with high gamma) are in a difficult position — every time the market moves, they're forced to buy or sell the underlying in the same direction as the move. They are always chasing price.

Market makers who are long gamma (they've bought high-gamma options) have the opposite situation — they naturally buy when prices fall and sell when prices rise. They are acting as a stabiliser.

The core idea you need for GEX: Long gamma dealers = stabilisers (buy dips, sell rips). Short gamma dealers = amplifiers (sell dips, buy rips). The entire concept of Gamma Exposure is just asking: "Which way are the market makers positioned, and what does their hedging do to market stability?" That's it. Article 4 takes this and makes it quantitative.

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Foundations · Article 4 of 15 · 8 min read

What Is Gamma Exposure (GEX) and Why Every Trader Should Know It

OptionsFlowFoundations8 min read

Every options trader has heard the word gamma. Most know it loosely as "the rate at which delta changes." But there is a deeper and far more practical idea hiding behind this number — one that can explain why large indices sometimes move smoothly, why they occasionally spiral, and why certain price levels seem to hold with almost magnetic force. That idea is Gamma Exposure, or GEX.

The Market Maker in the Middle

To understand GEX, you first need to understand who is on the other side of the options you buy and sell. In the Indian F&O market, the overwhelming majority of retail and institutional options activity is absorbed by professional market makers — entities whose job is to provide continuous two-way quotes and earn the bid-ask spread. These market makers do not have a view on market direction. They are not bulls or bears. They are in the business of collecting premium while staying as close to delta-neutral as possible.

The critical consequence of this is that market makers must hedge their books continuously. When you buy a call option, the market maker who sold it to you becomes short that call. To stay neutral, they buy some amount of the underlying — specifically, an amount equal to the option's delta. If the market moves up, the delta of your call increases, and the market maker must buy more. If the market falls, delta shrinks and they must sell. This continuous hedging is called delta hedging, and the speed at which those hedge ratios change is governed entirely by gamma.

What GEX Actually Measures

Gamma Exposure is a measure of how much additional buying or selling a market maker will be forced to do in response to a 1% move in the underlying. More precisely, it estimates the total rupee value of delta-hedge adjustments triggered by a given price change, aggregated across all strikes and all open contracts.

Simple definition: GEX tells you how many crores worth of futures or spot a market maker will need to buy or sell if Nifty moves by 1%.

When this number is positive (market makers are net long gamma), they will buy when the market falls and sell when it rises — acting as a natural stabiliser. When this number is negative (market makers are net short gamma), they will sell when the market falls and buy when it rises — amplifying moves in both directions.

Long Gamma vs Short Gamma: Two Very Different Markets

The sign of aggregate GEX has a measurable impact on intraday and multiday price behaviour.

In a long gamma environment, markets tend to mean-revert. Sharp moves get absorbed quickly because the hedging flow is counter-directional to price. Implied volatility often drifts lower because the supply of gamma from market-maker hedging is large relative to demand. Range-bound strategies like iron condors and short straddles perform well in these conditions.

In a short gamma environment, markets can trend aggressively with no natural brake. Because market-maker hedging is now pro-cyclical (they sell into a falling market, buy into a rising one), small moves can become large ones. Realised volatility tends to be higher. Trending strategies and long options positions become more attractive.

GEX Pin Levels

Where total GEX is largest in absolute terms — the so-called GEX Pin — is a strike price where market-maker gamma is so concentrated that their hedging activity creates a strong gravitational pull. The reason is simple: as the market approaches this strike, the delta-hedge adjustments required become large and bidirectional, which means the market maker is forced to buy as price dips below and sell as price rises above. The net effect is magnetic: price is continuously pulled toward the pin.

This is why so many weekly expiry cycles end with Nifty closing extremely close to a round number or a heavily loaded strike. It is not random. It is the mechanical consequence of delta hedging at scale.

The Four Dealer Scenarios

Market makers can be long or short on both calls and puts simultaneously. The GEX chart on this dashboard presents four scenarios — different assumptions about which way market makers are positioned on each side of the book:

Each scenario produces a different GEX chart, and the truth often lies somewhere between them. The Probable GEX chart attempts to identify which scenario is most likely at each individual strike by analysing how open interest has been accumulating over recent sessions.

Key Takeaway

GEX is not a trading signal in the traditional sense — it doesn't tell you whether to buy or sell. What it does is describe the structural environment the market is operating in. Positive GEX = dampening, range-bound, mean-reverting. Negative GEX = amplifying, trending, volatile. Understanding where you are in this cycle is one of the most useful edges available to any serious options trader.

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Deep Dive · Article 5 of 15 · 7 min read

Dealer Positioning Decoded: How Probable GEX Is Calculated

OptionsFlowDealer Flow7 min read

The four GEX scenario charts give a range of possibilities for dealer positioning. But they all assume the same posture applies uniformly to every single strike on the chain. That assumption is too crude. In practice, a market maker might be long gamma at the 24,000 strike (because large institutional writers sold calls there) but short gamma at the 23,500 strike (because retail traders bought protective puts aggressively). The Probable GEX chart attempts to resolve this strike-by-strike.

The Core Question

When OI increases at a particular strike, the critical question is: Who opened that position? A writer selling calls to collect premium has the opposite P&L profile from a buyer purchasing calls for protection or direction. Crucially, from the market-maker perspective, these two transactions result in opposite gamma positions — one makes the dealer long gamma at that strike, the other makes them short.

The Five Signals We Use

1. IV Direction (Primary Signal)

When a large institutional writer sells options, they are adding supply to the options market. Supply pushes prices down. Because options are priced in terms of implied volatility, more selling means IV falls or stays flat. When buyers are dominant, demand pushes IV up. So: OI rising + IV flat or falling = writers. OI rising + IV rising = buyers.

2. GEX/OI Proportionality

Writers tend to sell near-the-money options where gamma is highest. Buyers tend to buy cheap OTM options where gamma per rupee of premium is lower.

3. Strike Moneyness × Market Direction

Context matters. OTM call OI rising while the market is also rising is consistent with call writers following the market up. The analysis uses the synthetic futures price as the best available estimate of market direction between snapshots.

4. Proximity to ATM

ATM strikes carry more informational weight. A large OI change at the ATM strike has a bigger impact on dealer gamma than the same OI change deep OTM.

5. Recency Weighting

Not all historical snapshots are equally relevant. The most recent OI changes reflect the freshest positioning. Each OI snapshot is weighted exponentially — the most recent gets full weight, and each prior snapshot receives 85% of the previous one's weight.

Signed Delta Accumulation: The Key Idea

Rather than labelling an entire strike as "dealer long" or "dealer short," the analysis tracks each OI increment individually and signs it based on the evidence at the time it was added.

Example: Over the course of a session, 2,000 lots of writer activity accumulate at the 24,000 call (dealer long gamma). Then in the last 30 minutes, 500 lots of buyer activity appear. Net: 1,500 lots dealer-long equivalent. The whole strike does not get relabelled just because some buyers arrived late.

What the Chart Shows You

Positive (blue) bars: Dealer is estimated to be long gamma at this strike. Market-maker hedging will dampen moves in either direction away from this level.

Negative (orange) bars: Dealer is estimated to be short gamma at this strike. Moves through this level may be amplified.

The net total across all strikes tells you whether the aggregate dealer book is in a dampening or amplifying posture. Watch for negative bars near the current spot price — those are structural vulnerabilities.

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Greeks · Article 6 of 15 · 6 min read

Vanna and Charm: The Greeks That Move Markets at Expiry

OptionsFlowSecond-Order Greeks6 min read

Gamma gets most of the attention in options education. But two second-order Greeks — Vanna and Charm — are responsible for some of the most reliable and systematic market-moving flows in the entire F&O calendar, particularly in the final hours of a weekly expiry cycle. Understanding them helps explain behaviour that otherwise looks completely unpredictable.

Vanna: Delta's Sensitivity to Volatility

Vanna measures how much an option's delta changes when implied volatility moves. If you hold a long call and IV rises, your delta increases. If IV falls, your delta decreases. For a market maker who is delta-neutral, this creates a problem: every time IV changes, their delta hedge ratio becomes stale. They must rebalance. This rebalancing is vanna-driven delta hedging.

The practical pattern looks like this: If IV drops sharply — say, after a Fed announcement resolves uncertainty — market makers who are long calls see their deltas shrink. They must sell futures or spot to rebalance. This selling happens even though the market itself may not have moved materially on price. To a pure price-chart watcher, the selling looks random. To someone tracking vanna exposure (VEX), it is completely logical.

Vanna Exposure (VEX) — What the Chart Shows

The VEX chart on this dashboard shows the total vanna exposure of the estimated dealer book, strike by strike. A large positive VEX number means: if IV falls, market makers will need to sell the underlying. A large negative VEX means: if IV falls, they will need to buy.

Rule of thumb: If VEX is large and positive, watch for selling pressure on any IV spike resolution (expiry, event clearance). If VEX is large and negative, watch for buying flows on the same occasions.

Charm: Delta's Sensitivity to Time

Charm measures how much an option's delta changes purely due to the passage of time. As an OTM option approaches expiry with the underlying price unchanged, its probability of expiring in the money decreases. Its delta therefore also decreases. The market maker who sold this OTM call was buying spot to hedge the positive delta. As charm erodes that delta, they must now sell that spot back.

This is why you frequently see persistent selling pressure in OTM call strikes through Thursday and Friday of expiry week, even when Nifty isn't moving dramatically. It is charm unwind — market makers mechanically reducing their delta hedges as time value bleeds out.

Charm Exposure (CEX) — What the Chart Shows

The CEX chart aggregates charm across all positions in the estimated dealer book. A net positive charm number means the aggregate dealer book will need to reduce long delta hedges as time passes — effectively selling pressure from charm. CEX tends to be most meaningful in the 2-5 days before expiry.

The ITM VEX Chart

The ITM Vanna Exposure chart tracks the net vanna from options that are already in the money. This chart is particularly useful for understanding what happens to dealer hedges if the market makes a large, sustained directional move that brings a batch of OTM strikes into the money.

Why This Matters for Your Trading

Vanna and charm flows do not respond to news or sentiment. They are purely mechanical, time-and-vol-driven. Understanding the direction and magnitude of these flows gives you a structural edge: you know roughly where the systematic selling or buying will come from before it happens.

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Indicator · Article 7 of 15 · 5 min read

Put-Call Ratio (PCR): What It Actually Tells You About Nifty Direction

OptionsFlowFlow Indicators5 min read

Every morning on financial TV, someone mentions the PCR. "PCR is above 1.3, so market is bullish" — you've heard it. I want to tell you exactly why that interpretation is partially right, often misapplied, and what you should actually be looking at when you read PCR on this dashboard.

What PCR Is

Put-Call Ratio = Total Put OI ÷ Total Call OI. That's the formula. A PCR of 1.2 means there are 1.2x as many puts outstanding as calls. A PCR of 0.8 means more calls than puts. Simple.

The Counterintuitive Interpretation

Here's where most people get confused. You'd think high PCR (lots of puts) = bearish. But in practice, high PCR is often a bullish signal. Why? Because the majority of put buying in Indian markets is done by institutions and large traders as hedges — they are protecting long equity positions, not making directional bets. All those put writers on the other side are collecting premium, betting the market stays above those strikes. The net structural weight of all that put writing is actually a floor — a support level.

When PCR is very high (say above 1.4-1.5), it often means so many people have paid for downside protection that the structural support below is enormous. A market where everyone has already hedged their downside tends to go up more than it goes down. The hedges are already in place — there's no panic selling left to do.

When High PCR Is Actually Bearish

The interpretation flips when PCR is rising sharply in a short period of time — not because of steady institutional hedging, but because of sudden, aggressive put buying by participants who think a crash is coming. That kind of PCR spike is different in character: IV usually rises alongside it, and it typically shows up as a sharp spike in VEX too. Context always matters.

How to Read PCR on This Dashboard

The PCR table shows you the ratio across different strike ranges — not just the entire chain. The near-ATM PCR (the strikes within 2-3% of current spot) is the most meaningful number for short-term direction. Far OTM PCR can be dominated by cheap put buying that has very little structural weight. Always focus on near-money PCR first, then widen your view.

How I use it: I look at PCR as a confirmation tool, not a primary signal. A high near-ATM PCR in a positive GEX environment = strong bullish structure. The same PCR reading in a negative GEX environment = less meaningful, possibly fragile. PCR alone tells you one dimension. Combined with GEX and VEX it becomes much more useful.

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Structure · Article 8 of 15 · 6 min read

Call Wall & Put Wall: Options-Based Support and Resistance That Actually Works

OptionsFlowMarket Structure6 min read

Technical traders draw support and resistance on price charts. Options flow traders find their levels in a completely different place — the options chain itself. The Call Wall and Put Wall are two of the most reliable structural levels you'll find in any market, and they're derived directly from where the largest OI concentrations sit.

What Is the Call Wall?

The Call Wall is the strike with the largest call OI outstanding — typically the strike where the most call writing has accumulated. Think of it as the ceiling the market is building. The writers of those calls — who received premium — need the market to stay below that strike. They are structurally motivated to resist an upside breakout above that level.

More importantly for flow analysis: the market makers who are on the other side of those calls are long gamma at that strike. As the market approaches the Call Wall from below, dealer delta-hedging activity increases sharply. They begin selling the underlying as price rises toward the strike (to reduce their long delta exposure). This creates a natural ceiling effect — not because of sentiment, but because of mechanical hedging.

What Is the Put Wall?

The Put Wall works exactly the same way on the downside. It's the strike with the largest put OI — the floor that put writers are defending. Market makers holding the other side of these puts are also long gamma there, and as price falls toward the Put Wall, their hedging creates buying pressure that slows the decline.

This is why you'll often see Nifty bounce precisely at a strike ending in 000 or 500 — it's not magic, it's where the largest OI sits, and the mechanical hedging flows create real buying at that level.

When Walls Break

The Call Wall and Put Wall are not impenetrable. They break when the force driving the market through them — news, macro data, a global cue — is larger than the structural hedging resistance. When a wall breaks, the break can be fast and violent. Why? Because all the call writers or put writers who were defending that level now face sudden unrealised losses and may need to cover or roll their positions, adding momentum to the breakout.

I've seen this many times — Nifty holds a Put Wall for three sessions, then breaks it on a budget announcement and drops 300 points in 20 minutes. The wall was the reason it held as long as it did. The break was sharp because all the structural support vanished at once.

How to use this: The Call Wall and Put Wall define the expected range for the expiry cycle. When Nifty is between them, range-bound premium-selling strategies have structural backing. When it breaks through either wall, respect the momentum — the structure has changed.

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Key Level · Article 9 of 15 · 5 min read

Zero Gamma Line: The Most Important Level on the Entire Chart

OptionsFlowMarket Structure5 min read

Of all the levels and numbers on this dashboard, if I had to pick one to watch above everything else, it would be the Zero Gamma Line. Understanding what it is and why it matters is one of those things that genuinely changes how you look at the market.

What Is the Zero Gamma Line?

The Zero Gamma Line (ZGL) is the price level at which the aggregate dealer gamma flips from positive to negative — or vice versa. Above the ZGL, total GEX is positive and dealers are in a net long-gamma position. Below the ZGL, total GEX is negative and dealers are in a net short-gamma position.

It is not a line drawn arbitrarily. It is calculated directly from the options chain — it's the spot price at which the sum of all dealer gamma exposures across all strikes crosses zero.

Why It Matters So Much

The ZGL is the exact point where dealer behaviour flips from stabilising to amplifying. This is not a subtle difference — it's a complete reversal of the mechanical flow direction.

Above the ZGL: dealers are long gamma, they buy dips and sell rips. Every move is gently countered. The market gravitates toward ranges, and sharp moves get absorbed quickly. This is comfortable territory for range-bound traders.

Below the ZGL: dealers are short gamma, they sell dips and buy rips. Every move gets amplified. A 50-point fall can cascade to 200 points not because of news, but because of the mechanical hedging feedback loop. This is where market conditions become genuinely dangerous for option sellers and delta-neutral strategies.

ZGL vs GEX Pin — Different Things

People sometimes confuse the ZGL with the GEX Pin. They're not the same. The GEX Pin is the strike with maximum absolute gamma — the magnetic centre. The ZGL is the level where aggregate gamma changes sign. You can have the Pin at 24,000 and the ZGL at 23,600. In that case, above 23,600 you're in a stable long-gamma environment gravitating toward 24,000. Below 23,600 you're in amplifying short-gamma territory regardless of the pin.

How I use it: I check the ZGL before the market opens every day. If Nifty is well above it, I'm thinking range-bound, premium-selling, iron condor territory. If we're near the ZGL or below it, I'm thinking protective, directional, long-gamma strategies. The ZGL is the single number that tells me what kind of market I'm walking into.

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Volatility · Article 10 of 15 · 7 min read

Reading the Volatility Skew: What OTM Puts and Calls Are Really Saying

OptionsFlowVolatility7 min read

In a textbook Black-Scholes world, options at different strikes but the same expiry would all trade at the same implied volatility. In the real world, they never do. The pattern of how IV varies across strikes — the volatility skew — is one of the richest sources of market intelligence available.

The Skew Table: What You're Looking At

The skew table on this dashboard is organised symmetrically around ATM. Each row corresponds to one OTM distance level — 1% through 5% away from current spot. The columns are: the put strike and its IV, the option delta at that strike, the Risk Reversal (RR) for that level, then the call delta, call IV, and call strike.

OTM%PUT StrikePut IVPut ΔRRCall ΔCall IVCALL Strike
1%23,75015.2%Δ43−0.6%Δ4214.6%24,250
2%23,50016.1%Δ36−2.2%Δ3413.9%24,500
3%23,25017.5%Δ28−4.4%Δ2613.1%24,750
4%23,00018.8%Δ21−6.3%Δ1912.5%25,000
5%22,75020.2%Δ15−8.4%Δ1411.8%25,250

Why Delta Matters Here

Delta is the option market's own probability estimate: a Δ28 put has roughly a 28% chance of expiring in the money. When you see the put delta significantly higher than the call delta at the same OTM distance, it means put IV is elevated — the market is pricing more probability into the downside strike than the symmetric upside equivalent.

Key read: If Put Δ and Call Δ are close at 3% OTM (say Δ28 vs Δ26), skew is modest. If Put Δ is Δ35 while Call Δ is Δ22 at the same distance, the market is massively pricing downside — fear is elevated.

The Risk Reversal (RR) Column

The Risk Reversal at each level is simply Put IV − Call IV at that OTM distance. A more negative RR means more fear of downside. Reading the RR across levels is as important as any single number.

Interpretation: RR of −3% to −5% at the 3–5% OTM level is normal for Indian indices. Tighter than −2% suggests complacency. Wider than −7% suggests institutional hedging surge or genuine fear.

Volatility Risk Premium (VRP)

The VRP measures the difference between implied volatility and realised volatility over a comparable period. When implied vol is higher than what the market actually delivered, the VRP is positive — option sellers earned a premium for risk that didn't fully materialise.

Premium (positive VRP): The normal state — option sellers consistently collect a risk premium.

Discount (negative VRP): Realised vol is running above what was implied. Option buyers received value. These periods are often associated with trending, volatile markets.

The Synthetic Futures Premium

The synthetic futures price is derived from put-call parity: it equals spot plus (call price − put price) for the same strike. We use synthetic futures throughout the analysis as a more reliable reference point for ATM than spot price alone, because it reflects the actual forward price implied by the options market.

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Volatility · Article 11 of 15 · 5 min read

The Vol Surface Explained: What That 3D Chart Is Actually Showing You

OptionsFlowAdvanced Volatility5 min read

Most people who open the dashboard look at the vol surface chart, think "that looks complicated," and move on. That's a mistake. The volatility surface is actually one of the most information-dense outputs on the entire dashboard — it's just that most people haven't been shown how to read it. Let me fix that.

What Is the Volatility Surface?

The volatility skew (Article 10) shows you how IV varies across strikes for a single expiry. The vol surface takes this one step further — it shows you how IV varies across both strikes and expiries simultaneously. Two dimensions of the options market at once. That's why it's a 3D chart.

The X-axis is strike (or moneyness — how far OTM each strike is). The Y-axis is expiry (how far in the future). The Z-axis (height) is implied volatility. Every point on the surface represents the IV of one specific option — one strike, one expiry date.

What a Normal Surface Looks Like

In normal market conditions, the surface has two main features. First, it slopes upward as you go further OTM on the put side (the skew we covered in Article 10). Second, it slopes downward as you go further out in time — near-term options usually have higher IV than longer-dated ones. This is called downward term structure, and it's the "normal" state in calm markets where near-term uncertainty is higher than long-term.

When the Surface Gets Interesting

The surface becomes most useful when it's not normal. Here are the three readings I look for:

Inverted term structure — when far-dated options have higher IV than near-term ones. This means the market is expecting more volatility in the future than right now. Often happens before known events like elections, RBI policy announcements, or US Fed decisions that are more than a week away.

Kink or bump at a specific expiry — when one expiry has noticeably elevated IV compared to those around it. This is a clear signal that the market is pricing in an event around that specific date. Very useful for timing.

Flat or compressed surface — when IV across the entire surface is unusually uniform and low. This is often a complacency signal. Historically, these periods of extreme surface compression are followed by volatility expansion — sometimes violently.

How I use it: Before placing any options trade, I check the vol surface to see if the expiry I'm trading has anomalously high or low IV compared to adjacent expiries. If I'm selling premium on a weekly expiry that has elevated IV for no obvious reason, I want to understand why before I put the trade on. The surface tells me that immediately.

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Volatility · Article 12 of 15 · 6 min read

India VIX: How Fear Connects to Your Dashboard Data

OptionsFlowVolatility Context6 min read

India VIX gets called the "fear gauge" so often that most traders stop thinking about what it actually measures. That's a problem, because VIX has a direct mechanical relationship with dealer hedging flows — specifically with the VEX data on this dashboard. Understanding that relationship makes both tools more useful.

What VIX Actually Measures

India VIX is the NSE's measure of the expected volatility of Nifty over the next 30 days, derived from near-term and next-term Nifty option prices. It's expressed as an annualised percentage. A VIX of 15 means the options market is collectively pricing in approximately 15% annualised volatility for Nifty over the next month.

To convert VIX to a daily or weekly expectation: divide by the square root of time periods in a year. VIX of 15 implies roughly a daily move of 15 ÷ √252 ≈ 0.94%, or a weekly move of 15 ÷ √52 ≈ 2.08%. These are not predictions — they are the market's pricing of uncertainty.

VIX and Dealer Hedging — The Direct Link

Here is the connection most traders miss. VIX is essentially the aggregated implied volatility of the near-term Nifty options chain — the same chain that generates our VEX data. When VIX rises, IV across the chain rises. When IV rises, every delta-neutral dealer's vanna exposure forces them to rebalance. That's VEX in action — and it happens in real time as VIX moves.

So when you see VIX spike 20% in a session, you can immediately think: dealer vanna flows are being triggered across the chain. If VEX is large and positive on the dashboard, those flows are sellers. If VEX is large and negative, those flows are buyers. VIX tells you the trigger; VEX tells you the direction of the mechanical response.

High VIX — What It Actually Means for Trading

High VIX means options are expensive. Option sellers collect more premium but face higher realised volatility. Option buyers pay more but potentially have more room to profit. Neither is automatically better — it depends on whether the high VIX is justified by actual upcoming volatility.

What I find more useful is VIX direction rather than absolute level. A falling VIX from 20 to 16 over three sessions means IV is compressing — if VEX is positive, this compression is mechanically selling the market. A rising VIX means expanding IV — if VEX is negative, that expansion is mechanically buying the market. Combining VIX direction with VEX sign is one of the cleanest setups on the dashboard.

Quick framework: VIX falling + VEX positive = mechanical selling from vanna unwind. VIX falling + VEX negative = mechanical buying from vanna unwind. VIX rising + positive VEX = mechanical buying (dealers adding delta). VIX rising + negative VEX = mechanical selling. These are the four VIX/VEX combinations to watch.

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Expiry · Article 13 of 15 · 6 min read

Weekly vs Monthly Expiry: How GEX Behaviour Changes Across Cycles

OptionsFlowExpiry Dynamics6 min read

One of the questions I get asked most often by traders who are new to this dashboard is: "Why does the GEX reading feel different on expiry day vs a week before?" It's a great observation. GEX is not a static measure — its character changes dramatically depending on where you are in the expiry cycle. Here's how to think about it.

Why Expiry Cycle Position Matters

The gamma of an option is not constant. Gamma is highest when an option is near the money and close to expiry. As expiry approaches, the gamma of ATM options explodes — a 24,000 call with 7 days to expiry has far higher gamma than the same call with 30 days to expiry. This means dealer hedging becomes more intense and more reactive as expiry day approaches.

Think of it this way: in the early part of an expiry cycle (say, 3+ weeks out), GEX is spread across many strikes and many expiries. The hedging flows are relatively gentle and diffuse. As you approach the final week, more and more of the total options OI is concentrated in near-term strikes with very high gamma. The same price move triggers much larger hedging flows. The market becomes more sensitive to structural levels.

Weekly Expiry Behaviour

For Nifty weekly expiries, the high-gamma window is essentially the final 2-3 days. Before that, weekly options have modest gamma and GEX readings are dominated by the monthly chain. On Wednesday and Thursday of expiry week, the picture shifts completely — gamma in the weekly chain spikes, pinning behaviour becomes dominant, and charm/vanna flows from those expiring contracts become significant daily drivers.

This is why Thursday morning (Nifty expiry day) often sees very tight, range-bound action near a round number until around 1-2pm — and then either a sharp last-hour move or a final pin. It's mechanical. The high-gamma concentration near the GEX Pin is doing exactly what Article 4 described.

Monthly Expiry — The Big One

Monthly expiry (last Thursday of the month) is structurally more significant than a weekly expiry because monthly options accumulate far more OI over their lifetime. The GEX concentrations are larger, the pin gravity is stronger, and the vanna/charm flows in the final week are much more powerful.

In the week leading into a monthly expiry, I always check whether the ZGL is meaningfully above or below current spot. If Nifty is well above the ZGL going into the final week, the strong long-gamma environment tends to produce a quiet, drifting expiry. If Nifty is near or below the ZGL in the final week of monthly expiry — that's historically where you see the sharpest, most disorderly expiry sessions.

Calendar to keep in mind: Days 1-10 of a cycle = low gamma, structural levels are soft. Days 10-18 = moderate gamma, levels are firmer. Final 5 days = high gamma, strong pin behaviour, vanna/charm dominant. Expiry day = extreme gamma at ATM, pins are most magnetic, avoid fighting the structure.

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User Guide · Article 14 of 15 · 9 min read

How to Use This Dashboard: A Walkthrough of Every Chart and Number

OptionsFlowUser Guide9 min read

This dashboard produces a lot of information across a lot of charts. The goal of this guide is to explain exactly what each piece is, why it's there, and how to read it in a logical sequence — moving from the broadest structural view down to specific actionable detail.

Step 1: Start With the Synopsis Card

The Synopsis is the first thing to read. It compresses the entire analysis into one screen. The key numbers to check first are:

Step 2: Read the OI & GEX Monitor

The OI Monitor chart shows the current option chain — call OI and put OI as stacked bars per strike, with GEX overlaid. Look for strike concentration, asymmetry between calls and puts, and GEX direction per strike.

Step 3: Understand Dealer Positioning via Probable GEX

The Probable GEX chart is the most sophisticated output on the dashboard. Blue bars (positive) = dealer estimated long gamma. Orange bars (negative) = dealer estimated short gamma. Pay attention to the pattern around the current spot price.

Step 4: Check GEX Exposure Scenarios

The 4-scenario GEX chart presents the full option chain gamma under each of the four dealer positioning assumptions. Reading this alongside Probable GEX helps you understand the range of outcomes.

Step 5: Evaluate Vanna and Charm for Flow Timing

The VEX chart tells you which way IV-driven flows will push the market. The CEX chart tells you which way time-driven flows will push. Both are most relevant in the 2-5 days before expiry.

Step 6: Read the Volatility Skew Table

The OTM skew table shows, for each 1–5% OTM level: the put strike and its IV, the option delta, the Risk Reversal (RR), and the mirror call data. The RR column sits in the centre so you can read put/call asymmetry at a glance.

Step 7: Use the PCR and Top GEX Tables as Confirmation

The Put-Call Ratio (PCR) table shows the ratio of put OI to call OI across different strike ranges. The near-ATM PCR is most meaningful for short-term direction.

The Top 6 GEX Strikes table shows the six strikes with the largest absolute gamma concentration — your key structural levels for the expiry cycle.

Putting the Signals Together: A Practical Example

Imagine you see: GEX Regime = LONG γ, GEX Pin = 24,000, current Nifty at 23,950. Probable GEX shows strong positive bars at 23,800, 24,000 and 24,200. VRP is positive. PCR is 1.2. The skew table shows normal put wing.

This composite picture says: the market is in a structurally dampened state with a clear gravitational centre at 24,000. A range-bound, premium-selling approach (iron condor, short strangle around the pin) fits the structural environment well.

Final Notes

All outputs on this dashboard are derived from publicly available NSE option chain data and the standard Black-Scholes model. They are descriptive of structural forces, not directional predictions. Think of this data as describing the terrain the market is travelling through, not a map that tells you which direction it will go.

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Live Example · Article 15 of 15 · 8 min read

A Real Trade Setup: GEX + PCR + VEX Working Together

OptionsFlowApplied Analysis8 min read

Everything we've covered across the previous 14 articles has been building toward this. Reading individual indicators is one thing. Synthesising them into an actual pre-market view — and then a trade idea — is a different skill. Let me walk you through how I do it with a real example from a recent Nifty session.

Note: This is a worked example for educational purposes only. It is not investment advice. I am not SEBI registered.

The Setup — Pre-Market Checks

It's a Wednesday morning. Nifty closed at 23,920 the previous day. I open the dashboard and run through my sequence:

Synopsis check: GEX Regime = LONG γ. GEX Pin = 24,000. ZGL = 23,600. Nifty at 23,920 is well above the ZGL — I'm in long-gamma, stabilising territory. The Call Wall is at 24,200. The Put Wall is at 23,500. My structural range for this expiry cycle is 23,500 to 24,200.

PCR check: Near-ATM PCR = 1.28. Moderately bullish structure. Not extreme in either direction.

VEX check: VEX is +800 crores. This is a meaningful positive number. It means if IV falls today — which often happens mid-week when there's no event — market makers will be mechanically selling the market to reduce their delta exposure. IV compression = selling pressure from vanna flows.

CEX check: CEX is +300 crores. Tomorrow is expiry day. Charm is going to eat OTM call delta, forcing dealers to sell those hedges back. More near-expiry selling pressure.

Skew check: The RR at 3% OTM is −4.2%. Completely normal. No panic in the put wing, no unusual call demand. Vanilla skew environment.

Synthesising the Picture

Let me now put all of this together into a single coherent structural view:

The overall picture: a slightly bullish structural environment with a gravitational pin at 24,000, bounded by strong walls at 23,500 and 24,200, but with an intraday mechanical selling bias from VEX/CEX that may prevent a clean upside run.

The Trade Idea That Fits

In this environment, the structure strongly favours a short iron condor or short strangle positioned around the pin — specifically selling the 23,600 put and 24,300 call for the next day's expiry. Here's why each element supports this:

What Would Change the View

Structure is not destiny. Here's what I would watch that could invalidate this setup:

A move below the ZGL at 23,600 would immediately change the regime from long-gamma to short-gamma. If Nifty breaks 23,600, I exit the condor — the structure that justified the trade no longer exists. Similarly, if IV spikes sharply (VIX up 15%+ intraday), the VEX calculation changes sign and vanna flows reverse. Always have an exit condition based on structure, not just price.

The key habit: Before any options trade, spend 3 minutes on the Synopsis. Check the regime, the pin, the ZGL, VEX, and PCR in that order. If more than two of those are ambiguous or contradictory, wait for clarity. The best setups are when all five point in the same direction. Those don't happen every day — but when they do, the structural edge is real.

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