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Intel (INTC) pre-earnings score-card

Options 10 minutes to read
MicrosoftTeams-image (3)
Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Summary:  With Intel’s earnings approaching, the options market is already pricing a meaningful post-event move. This scorecard shows how to interpret that pricing, map it to key levels, and assess risk across options, charts, and fundamentals.


Intel (INTC) pre-earnings score-card

This article uses a scorecard approach to analyse Intel’s upcoming earnings. Instead of focusing on predictions, the scorecard organises the most relevant pre‑event information into four complementary lenses: options metrics (what the market is pricing), options flow (how traders are positioned), technical analysis (where price reactions are most likely to matter), and fundamental or news context (what the market will listen for). The purpose is to create a clear, consistent framework for assessing risk around the event, not to forecast the outcome.


Intel reports earnings after market close on 22 jan 2026. Options markets are already pricing a large move, which shifts the practical question away from guessing direction and toward a more useful problem: is the actual reaction likely to be larger or smaller than what is already priced in, and how can that be traded with defined risk?

At the time of writing, Intel trades around 46.96. The options market implies a move of roughly ±7.5% into the first expiry after earnings, which translates into a range of about 43.4 to 50.5. That range neatly overlaps with obvious chart levels, which makes this a good case study in how earnings pricing, technical context, and risk management come together.

Daily price chart of Intel showing an uptrend, with price near 47, support around 44–45 and resistance near 50–51
Intel shares remain in an uptrend, with the current price sitting between key support at 44–45 and resistance near 50–51 — levels that closely align with the options-implied earnings range. Source: © Saxo

What the options market is telling us

The most important piece of information ahead of earnings is the implied move. It is not a forecast, but a translation of option prices into a range the market is willing to pay for protection against.

In Intel’s case, that range is wide. Front-week implied volatility is elevated relative to the following month, a classic sign that the earnings event itself carries most of the uncertainty. This has two immediate implications. First, trades that use the event-week expiry will be very sensitive to both the overnight gap and the post-earnings volatility drop. Second, trades using the February expiry still reflect earnings risk, but with more time for any follow-through or mean reversion to play out.

Forward curve of at-the-money implied volatility for Intel options showing a sharp spike around the earnings event
The implied volatility forward curve shows a clear earnings-related spike, with front-week options carrying significantly higher volatility than later expiries. Source: © Saxo

Recent option flow adds colour but not a clean signal. Premium has been concentrated more in February and March expiries than in the event week itself, and while call premium has dominated overall, much of it traded at mid prices. In practical terms, this suggests positioning that extends beyond the earnings day, rather than a one-sided, all-in bet on the immediate reaction.


The technical backdrop: where the gap would land

From a chart perspective, Intel remains in an uptrend, trading above its medium- and long-term averages. Momentum has cooled from recent highs, but has not decisively broken down.

The levels that matter are straightforward. On the downside, the 44–45 area marks the first zone where a pullback would still be consistent with a constructive trend. Below that, the risk of a deeper reset increases. On the upside, the 50–51 area marks recent highs and a clear supply zone.

Overlaying the implied earnings range onto this map is instructive. The market is effectively pricing a move that could test either of these areas. That alignment makes this less about hidden technical levels and more about how the stock behaves if it reaches them.


What to watch in the earnings narrative

Earnings reactions are often driven less by the headline numbers than by how management frames the road ahead. For this release, the market’s sensitivity is likely to centre on three themes.

  1. First, forward guidance. Even a solid quarter can be overshadowed if near-term guidance disappoints or introduces uncertainty.
  2. Second, core demand and margins. Any commentary that materially changes confidence in Intel’s near-term earnings power can quickly shift expectations.
  3. Third, execution credibility, particularly around longer-term strategic initiatives. Investors tend to react not just to progress, but to whether that progress sounds concrete and believable.

The key point for options traders is that being “right” on the quarter does not guarantee a favourable price reaction if the forward narrative is repriced.


Three earnings scenarios

  • If Intel sells off and trades decisively into or below the 44–45 zone, the market is signalling disappointment. Volatility will likely fall after the event, but downside options can remain relatively supported if uncertainty persists. In this scenario, short downside premium is most vulnerable.
  • If the reaction is muted and the stock remains broadly between 44–45 and 50–51, the realised move is smaller than priced. This is where post-earnings volatility crush tends to dominate, and where long option positions can lose value even if direction is broadly correct.
  • If Intel surprises to the upside and pushes toward 50–51 or beyond, front-week volatility will still tend to fall, but upside options can remain firm if momentum follows. In this case, short calls and narrow call spreads carry the most risk.


Translating this into option frameworks

Overview of three option trading frameworks for Intel earnings: premium selling, directional spreads, and post-earnings follow-through
Three common ways traders approach earnings events: fading the priced move with defined-risk premium selling, expressing a directional view with spreads, or waiting for post-earnings price acceptance before acting. Source: © Saxo

Important note: The strategies and examples provided in this article are purely for educational purposes. They are intended to assist in shaping your thought process and should not be replicated or implemented without careful consideration. Every investor or trader must conduct their own due diligence and take into account their unique financial situation, risk tolerance, and investment objectives before making any decisions. Remember, investing in the stock market carries risk, and it's crucial to make informed decisions.
 

One way to approach this setup before earnings is with defined-risk premium selling, such as an iron condor placed inside the implied range. The thesis is not that the stock will not move, but that it will move less than priced. Risk must be strictly capped, and position size kept modest, because gaps can jump beyond expected ranges.

For traders with a directional view, defined-risk spreads offer a cleaner expression than outright long options. Using the event-week expiry creates a purer earnings bet, but comes with sharper volatility risk. Using the February expiry costs more, but allows time for a second-stage move after the initial reaction.

A third approach is to wait for the earnings reaction and trade the follow-through. Entering a February spread only after price acceptance above 50–51 or failure below 44–45 avoids paying peak event premium, at the cost of potentially missing the first part of the move – but it does come with one guaranteed benefit: a better chance of a good night’s sleep while the earnings numbers hit the tape.


Risk considerations

Earnings trades are high-variance by nature. Liquidity can deteriorate around the open, spreads can widen, and implied volatility can change unevenly across strikes. Any short option position carries assignment risk, particularly when options move in-the-money overnight. Defined-risk structures help cap losses, but they do not eliminate slippage or execution risk.

Position sizing matters more than structure choice. A single earnings gap should never be able to dictate portfolio outcomes.


Bottom line

Intel’s upcoming earnings are a good example of a priced event. Options already reflect a wide range, and that range maps cleanly onto visible chart levels. For active investors, the edge is less about predicting direction and more about choosing whether to fade or follow the priced move, selecting the right expiry, and keeping risk tightly defined.


Intel earnings scorecard snapshot (data reference)

The table below consolidates the key quantitative inputs behind the article. It is intended as a practical reference layer for traders who want to see the numbers that support the narrative and scenario framework above.

DimensionMetricValueHow to use it
EventEarnings timingAfter market close, 22 jan 2026Overnight gap risk applies; first reaction visible in the 23 jan expiry.
Spot / referenceSpot price (as of analysis)46.96Anchor for implied range, strike selection, and payoff assessment.
Options metricsImplied move (event week)±7.5% (±3.52)Benchmark for judging whether the realised move is larger or smaller than priced.
Implied range~43.4 to ~50.5Defines the zone where premium-selling structures are most sensitive.
Volatility term structureFront-week IV elevated vs FebruaryIndicates earnings risk is concentrated in the nearest expiry; post-event IV crush likely.
Options flowAggregate premium bias (10 sessions)Call-heavy, but mixed executionDirectional conviction is not clean; treat flow as context, not a signal.
Expiry concentrationFebruary/March > event weekSuggests positioning beyond the one-day earnings reaction.
Technical analysisPrimary support zone44–45Area to monitor for downside acceptance or failure after earnings.
Primary resistance zone50–51Area where upside reactions may stall or accelerate if cleared.
Trend regimeUptrend (above medium- and long-term averages)Bias for interpreting reactions: pullbacks vs trend breaks.
Fundamentals / newsKey narrative focusForward guidanceOften more influential than the reported quarter itself.
Secondary focusDemand and margin commentaryCan shift near-term earnings expectations quickly.
Structural focusExecution credibilityInfluences whether reactions fade or develop into trends.

 

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Guide on long-term options for strategic portfolio management
Assignment explained - 01 - what every options trader and investor should know
Assignment explained - 02 - how to avoid assignment
Assignment explained - 03 - how to use option assignment to your advantage
Assignment explained - 04 - option assignment cheat sheet
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