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Advanced Micro Devices — Where open interest creates price support and resistance
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) operates in the Information Technology sector and has actively traded listed options. Open interest concentrates at the $200 put wall (45.3K contracts) and $220 call wall (38.2K contracts) — 7.7% below and 1.5% above spot. Dealer hedging flows at these levels tend to dampen directional moves, reinforcing the wall corridor. This setup is more supportive of premium selling inside the wall range. See Strategy Builder for trade setups.
Where options dealers' hedging flows create support and resistance — max pain at $200.
These levels show where price may find support or resistance based on open interest positioning. Large put walls can act as magnets; call walls can cap upside.
Use wall levels to pick strikes — sell puts near put walls, sell calls near call walls.
Wall = Strike with highest open interest concentration across expirationsOpen interest by strike, gamma exposure (GEX) profile, max pain calculation
ORATS open interest and gamma data, updated daily
Walls are based on current OI positioning and can shift as traders open/close positions. GEX assumes most OI is dealer-held — retail-heavy OI produces less hedging flow. Treat as context, not prediction.
Walls from nearest liquid expiry — these reflect short-term hedging activity and may not represent longer-term positioning.
OI change tracker (1-day), wall strength score, and GEX trend chart — in active development.
This data is free for all users. No paywall — just not built yet.
Quantitative screening, not investment advice. Verify with your broker. Disclaimer
Advanced Micro Devices's options market reveals an asymmetric setup: put-side support at $200 is substantially heavier (45.3K contracts) than call resistance at $220 (38.2K). This imbalance means dealers are hedging more aggressively on the downside — they need to buy shares as price approaches the put wall, creating a floor effect. Upside, however, has less resistance. For premium sellers, this favors directional strategies that lean on the put support: cash-secured puts at or below $200, or put credit spreads using the wall as a backstop.
Advanced Micro Devices's current options landscape shows put support concentrated at $200 (45.3K contracts) with call resistance at $220 (38.2K). This creates a $200–$220 trading corridor that dealer hedging activity naturally reinforces. Compare this wall-to-wall range with the Expected Move to see how volatility-based ranges align with open interest boundaries.
Advanced Micro Devices's net gamma exposure is +6.2B (positive gamma regime), with the GEX flip point at $210.00. In a positive gamma environment, dealers are positioned so that they buy shares when price dips and sell when it rallies — effectively dampening volatility. This mean-reverting behavior is the best backdrop for premium selling: short strangles, iron condors, and credit spreads all benefit from the natural volatility compression that positive GEX creates. As long as price stays above the GEX flip point, this supportive environment tends to persist.
Advanced Micro Devices's strongest put wall (support) is at $200 with 45.3K open interest contracts, and the primary call wall (resistance) is at $220 with 38.2K contracts. This creates a trading range of $200–$220. Open interest is relatively balanced between puts and calls, creating symmetric dealer hedging pressure.
Open interest walls represent concentrations of options positions at specific strikes. When dealers hold these positions, they must hedge by buying or selling shares as price approaches wall levels, creating natural support (put walls) and resistance (call walls). Advanced Micro Devices currently has positive gamma exposure, which means dealer hedging reinforces these wall levels — buying dips near put walls, selling rallies near call walls. This creates a mean-reverting, range-bound environment that benefits premium sellers.
Use the put wall at $200 as support for put credit spreads and the call wall at $220 as a ceiling for call credit spreads. The wall-to-wall range defines your expected trading corridor. Wall data is most useful for strike selection — placing short strikes at or outside major open interest levels means your trade has dealer hedging flows working in your favor. Monitor daily for wall migration as open interest shifts.