0DTE Exp0.0%
Weekly Exp9.4%
Monthly Exp21.9%
Spot Price
$99.27
NFLX
Net GEX
$347.9M
Ratio: 2.65
Call GEX
$558.7M
3,682,153 OI
Put GEX
-$210.8M
2,463,316 OI
Total GEX
$769.5M
6,145,469 OI
Call Wall
$100
+0.74%
Put Wall
$80
-19.41%
Zero Gamma
N/A

Strike Profile

Gamma Exposure by Expiry

Gamma exposure by expiration date (in millions)

Gamma Price Profile

Projected Net Gamma at different price levels.Assumes constant IV.

Open Interest Analysis

OI Strike Profile

Open interest by strike price (in millions)

Intraday ΔGEX

Δ Session--
Δ Recent--

Signals

volatility
STRONG

Price movements likely to be dampened, good for selling volatility

@ $99.270.00%
magnet
STRONG

Price likely to gravitate toward this level

@ $100.00+0.74%
volatility
STRONG

Expect increased volatility if price falls below this level

@ $80.00-19.41%

Gamma Squeeze Screener

bullish bias
Bullish Squeeze
likely
Probability Score50/100
UnlikelyPossibleLikelyImminent
Factor Breakdown
Gamma Regime
0
Call Wall Proximity
25
Flow Alignment
10
Volume Confirm
N/A
DEX Bias
5
Key Levels
Current Price$99.27
Call Wall
(+0.74%)$100.00
Setup Analysis
Long Gamma Environment (dampens squeeze)
Call Wall at $100.00
Neutral flow - bullish flow would strengthen
Awaiting volume confirmation
For Stronger Setup
  • *Long gamma dampens squeeze potential
  • *Neutral flow - bullish flow would strengthen setup
Trading Implication

Bullish squeeze conditions developing. Watch for bullish flow continuation and price approaching $100.00.

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NFLX Gamma Exposure (GEX) Analysis

Netflix, Inc. (NFLX) GEX Overview

Netflix, Inc. (NFLX) is a stock in the Communication Services sector currently trading at $99.27. This page provides real-time gamma exposure (GEX) analysis for NFLX options, showing how market maker hedging activity creates key support and resistance levels.

Gamma exposure measures the sensitivity of options market makers' delta hedging to changes in the underlying stock's price. When the net gamma exposure is large, market maker hedging flows can significantly influence NFLX's price behavior.

Key NFLX GEX Levels

  • Spot Price: $99.27
  • Net GEX: $347.92M — Net positive gamma indicates a volatility-suppressing environment
  • Zero-Gamma Level: N/A
  • Call Wall: $100.00 (549.5K OI) — Significant resistance level where heavy call open interest creates selling pressure from market makers
  • Put Wall: $80.00 (256.7K OI) — Significant support level where heavy put open interest creates buying pressure from market makers
  • Peak GEX Strike: $100.00 — The strike with the highest absolute gamma exposure, acting as a price magnet
  • Max Pain: $19.50 — The price at which option holders would experience the maximum loss at expiration

Market Maker Positioning for NFLX

NFLX is currently in a positive gamma environment. Market makers are likely to dampen price moves by selling into rallies and buying dips, which tends to reduce volatility and pin the price near key GEX levels.

With positive net gamma of $347.92M, the options market is creating a stabilizing force on NFLX's price. Traders may expect the stock to trade in a tighter range around the peak GEX strike of $100.00.

NFLX Open Interest Summary

The options market for NFLX shows 6.1M total open interest across all strikes and expirations.

  • Call Open Interest: 3.7M contracts
  • Put Open Interest: 2.5M contracts
  • Put/Call Ratio: 0.67 — Low put/call ratio suggests bullish options sentiment

The concentration of open interest between the put wall at $80.00 and the call wall at $100.00 defines the expected trading range based on options positioning.

Understanding Gamma Exposure

Gamma exposure (GEX) quantifies how much options market makers need to hedge as the underlying stock price changes. Because market makers typically take the opposite side of retail and institutional options trades, their hedging activity creates systematic buying and selling pressure at specific price levels.

How GEX Affects Stock Prices

  • Positive GEX (Volatility Suppression): When net gamma is positive, market makers must sell as the stock rises and buy as it falls. This creates a natural dampening effect on price movement, often causing the stock to gravitate toward high-GEX strikes.
  • Negative GEX (Volatility Amplification): When net gamma is negative, market makers must buy as the stock rises and sell as it falls. This amplifies moves in both directions and can contribute to sharp rallies or selloffs.
  • Zero-Gamma Level: The price at which gamma exposure flips from positive to negative. This level is critical because crossing it can change the character of price action from pinned to volatile (or vice versa).

Key GEX Levels Explained

  • Call Wall: The strike with the most call gamma exposure. Acts as resistance because market makers sell the stock as it approaches this level.
  • Put Wall: The strike with the most put gamma exposure. Acts as support because market makers buy the stock as it approaches this level.
  • Peak GEX Strike: Where absolute gamma exposure is highest. Often acts as a price magnet during the trading session.

How to Use GEX Data for Trading NFLX

  1. Identify the Gamma Regime: Check whether NFLX is in positive or negative gamma territory. Positive gamma favors mean-reversion strategies; negative gamma favors momentum strategies.
  2. Watch Key Levels: The call wall, put wall, and zero-gamma level act as dynamic support and resistance. These levels update as options positioning changes.
  3. Monitor Expiration Concentration: A high percentage of gamma expiring in the near term (0DTE or weekly) means these levels are most relevant in the short term and may shift significantly after expiration.
  4. Combine with Price Action: GEX levels are most powerful when they align with traditional technical levels. A call wall that coincides with a technical resistance level is a higher-conviction zone.

Disclaimer

This analysis is for informational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice. Options trading involves substantial risk and is not suitable for all investors. Gamma exposure levels are based on current options positioning and can change rapidly. Past options positioning does not predict future price action.