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Open Interest Monitor - 9 Sep 2025 - ADBE deep dive

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

Investment and Options Strategist

Open Interest Monitor – 9 Sep 2025 - ADBE deep dive

Data through market open 8 September 2025

This monitor tracks how option market activity is clustering across US-listed stocks, ETFs, and indices. We highlight where open interest is growing, how skew and implied volatility shape sentiment, and which tickers show signs of institutional interest.

Each edition also features a spotlight deep dive on a single name showing unusual flows, rising implied volatility, or proximity to a key event. This week’s focus is on Adobe (ADBE), which reports earnings on 11 September and is drawing elevated options interest across multiple strikes.

Note: This edition covers US-listed instruments. European listings will be included in future versions.


Stock-option deep dive: Adobe ahead of earnings

Adobe reports on 11 September, and options are pricing in an 8.9% post-earnings move—above the 7–8% implied range seen in recent quarters, and higher than the 8.1% average actual move over the last 20 results. Notably, Adobe has moved more than implied in six of the past eight earnings releases, pointing to a pattern of underpriced event volatility.

Options activity is climbing. Over 36,000 contracts traded in the last session—129% above the pre-earnings average—and the put-to-call volume ratio sits near 1.0, indicating no strong directional skew. However, implied volatility is rich, with the one-month IV at 53.3% versus 29.8% realised, placing it in the 95th percentile over the past year.

The open interest distribution (see below) reinforces this elevated uncertainty. Put interest clusters between 290 and 330, suggesting a downside hedge zone. Call OI is more spread out, with notable peaks around 360 to 400. This suggests traders are bracing for a wide move in either direction, without a clear pinning strike. The put-heavy base near 320–330 could act as short-term support if the stock declines.

Adobe shares have dropped 19% over the last three months and 41% over the past year, significantly underperforming the broader S&P 500. That weak backdrop likely explains why traders are turning to options for both protection and tactical exposure ahead of earnings.

What it means: The options market expects a volatile earnings reaction. With premiums elevated, premium sellers may find opportunities—but directional traders should consider the cost of entry and the wide expected move when structuring trades.

Open interest distribution – expiry 12 Sep 2025

2025-09-08-00-ADBE-OpenInterestDistributionCurve-12sep2025
Open interest distribution for ADBE ahead of earnings on 12 Sep 2025 © SaxoTraderGO / Pro

Top 20 underlyings by open interest

RankTickerNameLastIV Rank (%)Total OI1M OI % ChgOptions VolP/C Vol
1$SPXS&P 500 Index6481.508.2%21.5M4.5%5.0M1.15
2NVDANvidia Corp167.027.0%20.3M4.6%3.9M0.57
3SPYS&P 500 SPDR647.247.4%18.1M1.7%10.1M1.00
4$VIXCBOE Volatility Index15.557.6%12.8M1.9%1.8M0.21
5IWMRussell 2000 ETF237.777.8%12.1M0.4%1.7M1.71
6QQQNasdaq 100 ETF576.067.7%9.6M7.3%4.9M1.15
7HYGHigh Yield Bond ETF80.879.4%9.0M12.0%592K4.22
8TSLATesla Inc350.848.0%7.9M1.4%4.0M0.63
9EEMEmerging Markets ETF50.456.0%7.0M2.9%106K0.66
10AAPLApple Inc177.417.3%6.9M2.4%3.4M0.68
11MSFTMicrosoft Corp345.506.5%6.2M2.7%2.0M0.48
12AMZNAmazon.com Inc196.236.9%5.9M3.2%2.8M0.55
13METAMeta Platforms317.097.1%5.3M1.2%2.0M0.58
14AMDAMD Inc112.716.7%5.0M2.8%2.0M0.74
15GOOGLAlphabet Class A134.956.3%4.8M1.5%1.5M0.59
16BACBank of America34.925.9%4.4M1.6%580K0.97
17JPMJPMorgan Chase157.286.4%4.2M1.9%620K1.10
18SMHSemiconductors ETF207.935.7%3.9M3.3%190K5.81
19INTCIntel Corp39.635.8%3.7M2.2%430K1.03
20TLT20Y Treasury Bond ETF92.486.1%3.6M2.7%240K1.82

This table shows the 20 listed options with the highest total open interest, combining calls and puts. Open interest data reflects active outstanding contracts and offers insights into market liquidity, sentiment, and positioning.

What the columns mean (short version):

Last = Last traded price of the underlying
IV Rank = Implied volatility rank (0–100 scale)
Total OI = Combined open interest for puts and calls
1M OI % Chg = Change in total open interest over the past month
Options Vol = Daily trading volume in options
P/C Vol = Put/Call volume ratio (based on daily volume)

For more detail, see the full glossary at the bottom of this article.


What traders can take away

Based on the top 100 by open interest

Several stocks posted sharp increases in option interest this week, including Marvell (MRVL), CrowdStrike (CRWV), and PDD, each with double-digit OI gains. That often points to growing institutional attention, either for speculation or hedging.

On the volatility side, Kenvue (KVUE) and PG&E (PCG) show the highest implied volatility ranks, meaning the market is paying up for protection or anticipating key developments.

Finally, some names stand out for their extreme put-to-call ratios. SMH, HYG, and CORZ all show heavy put activity—suggesting traders are positioning defensively. In contrast, ultra-low ratios in WBD and GRAB hint at speculative call interest.


A few observations

Based on the top 100 by open interest

Volatility expectations remain split. Some names—WULF, SMH, and HTZ—show near-zero implied volatility rank, suggesting traders expect little short-term movement.

At the same time, high put-to-call volume in SMH, HYG, and CORZ points to active hedging. This often reflects concern over rates, credit risk, or sector-specific volatility.

Semiconductors continue to dominate option flow. With NVDA, MRVL, and SMH among the top in OI and volatility, this sector remains a key area of institutional focus.


Conclusion

This week’s option activity paints a mixed picture. Index-level open interest remains dominant, but pockets of strong activity—especially in semiconductors—signal where traders see opportunity and risk. Adobe’s pre-earnings setup is particularly notable, with expensive volatility pricing in a wide move. Meanwhile, defensive positioning in credit and tech suggests some traders are bracing for bumps ahead.

For investors, options continue to offer clues—not just about sentiment, but about how markets are preparing for what’s next.


Glossary

  • Ticker: the exchange-listed symbol for the underlying stock, ETF, or index. Indices are noted with a $ prefix in general use, but we map them to specific exchange codes in the ticker string.
  • Name: the company or ETF name associated with the ticker. ETFs typically describe their focus, such as “S&P 500” or “20+ Year Treasury Bonds.”
  • Last: The last traded price of the underlying asset (stock, ETF, or index). This gives a reference point for where the asset currently trades and helps identify how close it is to key strike levels in the option chain.
  • IV Rank (%): Implied Volatility Rank (IV Rank) shows where current implied volatility sits relative to the past 12 months. A reading of 0% means IV is at its lowest point of the year; 100% means it's at the highest. Higher IV Rank suggests options are more expensive compared to recent history, which may favour premium-selling strategies.
  • Total Open Interest (Total OI): This is the total number of open option contracts across both calls and puts for the underlying. It represents outstanding positions that have not yet been closed or exercised. High OI is often associated with deep liquidity and significant institutional interest.
  • 1M OI % Change: Shows how much total open interest has changed over the past month. A rising figure can point to fresh positioning or increased speculation, while a falling number may indicate closed-out trades or reduced interest in the underlying.
  • Options Volume: The number of option contracts traded during the most recent session. High volume relative to open interest may suggest new trades are being initiated. Sudden spikes often coincide with market-moving news or upcoming events.
  • Put/Call Volume Ratio (P/C Vol): This ratio compares the volume of puts traded to calls on the same day. A ratio above 1.0 implies more puts were traded (often for downside protection), while a value below 1.0 shows call-heavy flow (often speculative or bullish). Extreme readings can highlight skewed sentiment or potential contrarian signals.
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