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When the tail wags the dog: using options data to understand stock moves

Equities 10 minutes to read
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Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Summary:  Stocks often make big moves without big news. This article shows how options positioning and hedging flows can increasingly set the short-term price action, and which simple options indicators (implied volatility, put/call balance, key expiry dates) can help investors tell signal from noise, even if they never trade an option.


When the tail wags the dog:
using options data to understand stock moves


Key points for investors

  • Day-to-day stock moves are increasingly driven by options trading and hedging flows, not just company news or macro data.
  • This affects both buy & hold and active investors: it changes the path of returns, the feel of drawdowns and the “randomness” of intraday moves.
  • You do not need to trade options to benefit from them. Treat options as data: a richer sentiment, volatility and positioning dashboard for equity investing.

  1. The strange new market of big moves and little news

Many investors recognise this pattern: you open your portfolio in the morning and find a solid, well-known company down 4% on a day with no obvious headlines. Earnings are months away, analysts have not changed their forecasts, and the macro backdrop looks unchanged.

Yet the price action is violent.

One reason is that the “centre of gravity” for risk-taking has shifted. While long-term ownership still happens in the cash equity market, a growing share of short-term views, hedges and speculation now takes place in options. The knock-on hedging flows from these options trades can move the underlying shares, sometimes aggressively.

In other words, in the short term stocks increasingly behave like derivatives of the options market, rather than the other way around.


  1. How we quietly moved into an options-first world

Over the past decade, two structural changes have reshaped market plumbing:

  • Cash equities became more passive. Index funds and ETFs now account for a large share of equity assets. They rebalance mechanically, not intraday, which means less “active” decision-making in the cash market from one hour to the next.
  • Options volumes exploded. Index options, single-stock options and very short-dated contracts (often expiring the same day) now trade at enormous scale. Around major events, the notional value traded in index options can rival or exceed turnover in the underlying index constituents.
Bar chart showing average daily options volume rising from roughly the mid-teens (millions of contracts per day) in the early 2010s to above 60 million by 2025, with a noticeable step-up after 2020.
Options activity has expanded sharply over the past decade, which helps explain why options positioning and hedging flows can increasingly shape short-term stock moves. © Saxo / theocc.com

As a result, the marginal price setter has migrated. If a large institution wants to hedge a portfolio, or a tactical trader wants to express a view on a stock into earnings, they may prefer options for their leverage and flexibility. Market makers and dealers then hedge the risk from those options trades by buying or selling the underlying shares or futures.

That hedging activity shows up as real buying or selling in the equity market, even though the original “decision” was made in the options market. The tail starts to wag the dog.

Regulators and central banks have begun to notice this too, particularly around episodes of stressed volatility, because concentrated options positioning can amplify market moves.


  1. How options flows move stock prices, in plain language

Options traders often talk about “Greeks” such as delta, gamma and vega. These are risk measures that describe how option prices, and the hedges behind them, react when the market moves, time passes or volatility changes.

You do not need to be fluent in all those details to understand the basic mechanics.

Most options trading involves three types of players:

  • End investors (hedge funds, institutions, sophisticated individuals) who buy or sell options to take views or hedge risk.
  • Dealers and market makers, who stand in the middle and quote prices.
  • The underlying market (stocks or futures), which dealers use to hedge the risk they take on from options.

When an investor buys a large number of call options on a stock or index, a dealer is typically on the other side. The dealer does not want to be exposed if the price rises sharply, so they often buy some of the underlying to hedge. If the price rises further, their models may tell them to buy more to stay hedged.

The reverse happens when there is heavy demand for put options: dealers may need to sell the underlying to hedge downside exposure.

This hedging can:

  • Calm markets in some regimes, when dealers are positioned so that they buy dips and sell rallies.
  • Amplify moves in others, when they are forced to buy as prices rise and sell as prices fall.

Real-world examples show how broad this effect has become:

  • Meme stocks such as GameStop and AMC experienced “gamma squeezes” when massive call buying forced dealers to buy stock, reinforcing the rally far beyond fundamentals.
  • Megacap tech names like Nvidia or Tesla often see intense options activity around product launches or earnings, which can turbo-charge both rallies and pullbacks.
  • Very short-dated index options (often expiring the same day) have grown rapidly. Their flows can “pin” an index to certain levels intraday or create sharp reversals when large positions shift.

From the outside, it can look as if the market is behaving erratically for no reason. Under the surface, it is often the predictable outcome of a complex options book being rebalanced.

Infographic explaining how fundamentals and options flows interact, illustrating a dealer hedging feedback loop (calls and puts leading to dealer stock hedging that can amplify moves) and highlighting a simple “options data dashboard” for investors: implied volatility, put/call balance, and an expiry calendar with key levels.
A visual summary of the core idea: options flows can create feedback loops in the underlying, while a small set of options indicators can help investors interpret whether a move is likely flow-driven or fundamentally driven. Source: Saxo

Note: the infographic includes trader shorthand (such as “0DTE” and “gamma”). Those terms are widely used by options traders to describe very short-dated options and hedging sensitivity, but you do not need to master that jargon to use the higher-level indicators discussed in this article.


  1. What this means for buy & hold investors

For investors with a multi-year horizon, the key message is reassurance with context.

  • Over five or ten years, fundamentals still dominate. Earnings power, balance sheet strength and competitive advantages remain the main drivers of long-run returns.
  • However, the path to those returns has become more jagged. Short-term drawdowns and spikes are more influenced by flows and hedging than by new information about the underlying business.

This has two implications:

  1. Emotional resilience matters even more. You may see steeper, faster moves against you that are largely flow-driven. Understanding that options activity can be the cause may help you avoid reacting to every sharp dip as if your investment case had suddenly broken.
  2. Options data can highlight opportunity. When a quality business trades lower on a day dominated by hedging flows, it may represent a better entry point or a chance to add, provided your long-term thesis is intact.

You can gain this context without ever trading an option by treating a few simple measures as a market weather map:

  • Implied volatility (IV) for key indices or holdings, which reflects how much movement the options market is pricing.
  • Relative put vs call activity, which gives a sense of how much downside protection investors are seeking.
  • Awareness of major options expiry dates, when flows can make markets more volatile or oddly “sticky” around certain levels.

  1. What this means for active investors

For more active investors, options data can become a core part of the daily preparation routine, even if they only trade cash equities or ETFs.

Practical uses include:

  • Assessing the trading environment each day. Elevated implied volatility in index options, a surge in downside puts, or unusually high volumes in very short-dated contracts can signal that markets are positioned for bigger moves or are heavily hedged.
  • Understanding intraday “personality”. On days with large positions in short-dated options clustered around key index levels, markets may be more prone to:

Sideways trading around those levels, as hedging flows pin prices, or Fast moves if a catalyst knocks the market away from those “gravity points.”
Position size, stop-loss levels and patience can all be adjusted with this in mind.

  • Separating signal from noise. When a stock moves sharply on a day where options activity is clearly extreme, it is a prompt to ask whether the move is primarily a flow event or the start of a fundamental shift. That question alone can improve decision quality.

Again, the point is not to turn every investor into an options strategist. It is to accept that in an options-centric market, price action often reflects positioning dynamics as much as it reflects information.


  1. You don’t need to trade options to think in options

The equity market is still, at its core, a market of businesses and cash flows. But the way those businesses are priced from minute to minute has changed. The modern market is one where stocks frequently trade as derivatives of the options market in the short term.

For both buy & hold and active investors, the practical takeaway is simple: you do not have to trade options, but ignoring options data means ignoring a major driver of price.

Starting with a basic options dashboard – implied volatility, put/call balances and awareness of key expiry dates – can already make mysterious moves more understandable, and help you navigate a market where the “tail” increasingly shapes the dog’s path.

This content is marketing material and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.
The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options..

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