Quarterly Outlook
Q1 Outlook for Traders: Five Big Questions and Three Grey Swans.
John J. Hardy
Global Head of Macro Strategy
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: Monday and Wednesday option expiries are now available on a select group of mega-cap stocks, giving active investors more flexibility around earnings and other market-moving events. Instead of being locked into a full trading week, options can now be aligned more closely with when uncertainty actually matters.
Over recent weeks, U.S. equity options markets have introduced a subtle but meaningful update that many active investors may not yet have noticed. In addition to the familiar Friday expiries, Monday and Wednesday option contracts are now available on a small group of the most actively traded stocks and one large ETF.
This does not mean that options are suddenly available every day across the market. Instead, it reflects a targeted expansion designed to give traders more flexibility in how long they stay exposed to specific risks. For investors who focus on earnings, news, or other scheduled events, this change can be immediately relevant.
The expansion of Monday and Wednesday expiries is deliberately selective. It applies only to securities where trading activity and liquidity are deep enough to support additional contracts without fragmenting markets.
As of early Q1 2026, the following U.S.-listed stocks and ETF offer Monday and Wednesday expiries alongside the traditional Friday cycle:
These names represent some of the most liquid stocks and options markets globally, often grouped under the “Magnificent Seven,” with Broadcom and IBIT included due to their scale and activity.
Earlier discussions in the market also mentioned other highly liquid ETFs, such as the Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLF), but these were not included in the initial rollout. This selectivity underlines that the move is evolutionary rather than a blanket expansion.
If adoption remains strong and liquidity continues to concentrate where expected, exchanges may choose to extend this framework to additional stocks or ETFs over time.
For many active investors, the most tangible benefit of expanded expiries is timing control.
Until now, options tied to a Tuesday-after-close earnings release typically expired on Friday. Even if the market reaction was largely complete by Wednesday, the position still carried exposure for several additional days. With a Wednesday expiry now available, that mismatch is reduced.
The same logic applies to other scheduled events, such as central bank decisions, product launches, or regulatory announcements. Options can now be aligned more closely with the window when uncertainty is highest, rather than defaulting to a full trading week.
Another consequence of having multiple expiries during the week is greater visibility into short-term expectations.
Each expiry represents a snapshot of how the market prices risk over a specific time window. Instead of relying on a single Friday contract to infer sentiment, investors can observe how expectations evolve from one expiry to the next as new information emerges.
This does not guarantee better forecasts, but it does provide more frequent reference points for understanding where uncertainty is concentrated and how quickly it is being resolved.
While the calendar has expanded, the underlying mechanics have not changed. These are still options on individual stocks and ETFs, which means they can be exercised into shares.
As expiration approaches, trading activity can concentrate late in the session, particularly on expiry days and around heavily traded strike prices. This behaviour differs from cash-settled index options and is an important practical consideration for investors using short-dated contracts.
Expanded expiries are likely to appeal to several types of market participants:
The common thread is improved control over when exposure begins and ends.
A related example appears in bitcoin-linked ETFs such as IBIT. Bitcoin trades continuously, including over weekends, while U.S. equity markets do not.
From Friday’s close to Monday’s open, prices can move without the ability to adjust ETF positions. Monday expiries allow the options market to reflect that weekend uncertainty more directly. Whether this leads to consistently higher premiums is an empirical question, but the mechanism highlights the broader theme: options are increasingly being shaped around real-world timing rather than fixed calendar conventions.
Monday and Wednesday expiries do not change what ultimately drives markets. They do, however, change how precisely investors can engage with those drivers. For active investors, that added precision can make options feel more closely aligned with the moments that actually move prices.
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