Full Speed Ahead

The retail option bubble continues higher with institutional traders watching on in utter awe as to the outright insanity that is taken place in front of their eyes. And of course are taking full advantage per the old aphorism that a fool and his money are soon parted. This is going to be extensive as I’m literally going to bombard you with charts and graphs today. So grab yourself a cup of Java or whatever non-GMO organic sustainable cruel-free tasteless concoction that tickles your fancy, strap yourself in, and get ready for a wild ride.

Let’s set the stage by talking about the big elephant in the room that stomped all over Wall Street and broke all the China last week: Gamestop.  Unless you’ve lived under a rock then you probably are already aware but the gist of the story is that a bunch of retail rats were unhappy about short-seller Citron Research announcing a livestream video that would lay out the “5 reasons GameStop [buyers] are the suckers at this poker game” and why GameStop stock would go “back to $20 fast.”

What happened next of course was a retail driven short squeeze of biblical proportions that propelled Gamestop from $20 to over $75 and, just to add insult to Citron’s injury, was accompanied by a collective social media hazing by an unruly crew of Reddit members.

I know what you’re thinking. Serves them right for playing the old ‘analyst slap down’ game, which essentially is a semi-legal way of short selling a stock prior to publicizing negative news about it. Well, yes and no. No love lost for Citron and its ilk here but don’t think that this is going to turn into some kind of happy ending. Let me show you why:

First up let’s look up the statistics for last Friday. We’re talking over 2 Million option contracts traded which is more than double of what is normal for GME. But that’s not all.

Look closer.

No closer. Much closer!

See the columns ‘traded at BID or below’ and ‘traded at ASK or above’? Look at those numbers! This effectively means that from 2.1 Million contracts traded 1.1 Million were market orders!

Now look at the implied volatility in GME across all the chains – that is simply massive and nothing short of a market maker’s wet dream in Aruba.

Here are last week’s spreads which are so wide that you could drive a German Tiger panzer through it with plenty of room to spare. And if you really think this is normal then you’re two fries short of a happy meal.

Okay Mole, settle down. Most likely Gamestop is a one-off and thus the exception to the rule.

WRONG!

Take a wild guess what these stats are for. No, not TSLA – it’s f…ing MSFT.

Here’s FB. Put/call ratio of 2:1 albeit with little participation.

Please forgive me for getting a wee bit giddy over here. But if you think what I’ve shown you above is bad enough, then you’re wrong again.

It gets worse…

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  • Mike
  • 3 years ago

About the Author

Hey there, I am one of the founding members of Red Pill Quants. I used to work as a systems engineer in Silicon Valley until I left the industry in 2008 to become a full time quant trader. It's been fun ever since.