Quarterly Outlook
Q4 Outlook for Investors: Diversify like it’s 2025 – don’t fall for déjà vu
Jacob Falkencrone
Global Head of Investment Strategy
Investment and Options Strategist
Data through market close 2025-10-20
This monitor scans US-listed options markets to identify where open interest (OI) is concentrated, where skew and IV suggest positioning, and how this translates into sentiment signals. Each edition also features a focused options deep dive on a selected underlying—where we analyze volatility structure, positioning, and flow data to better understand what market participants may be anticipating.
If the AI trade has a hidden backbone, it’s the energy grid — and that grid increasingly runs through nuclear. Behind the headlines about chips and servers, the real bottleneck is power. Every new data centre needs baseload capacity that renewables can’t yet provide. That’s why uranium equities, and the Global X Uranium ETF (ticker URA), have turned into a quiet momentum engine on the energy side of the AI story.
Liquidity in URA’s options has deepened fast. Daily volume now rivals mid-tier index ETFs, spreads are tight, and volatility is rich enough to matter. For traders, it’s the rare setup where narrative, liquidity, and volatility all align — a playground for structured views rather than outright bets.
At first glance URA looks overheated. Implied volatility is pinned near the top of its one-year range, with IV Rank pushing 100 %. But that number hides the real story: it’s the shape, not the level, that’s loud.
Expiry | ATM IV (%) | OTM Put IV (%) | OTM Call IV (%) | Put-Call Skew (Δ pp) |
---|---|---|---|---|
24 Oct 2025 (weekly) | 67 | 171 | 121 | +49 |
21 Nov 2025 (monthly) | 64 | 78 | 70 | +8 |
The 24 Oct weekly isn’t a broad volatility spike — it’s a put-wing blowout. Traders are paying up for short-term downside protection while the at-the-money vol stays well-behaved. In other words, hedging pressure, not panic.
On 20 October, roughly 3 ,800 puts vs 1 ,500 calls traded across URA’s chain — a heavy lean toward downside insurance. The flow clustered around the 52 P and 55 P strikes, both pricing IV in the low 70s. Open interest confirms it:
Strike | Total OI | Bias |
58 | 938 | balanced |
55 | 603 | put-heavy |
51 | 507 | put-heavy |
57 | 357 | call-tilted |
60 | 319 | call-tilted |
50 | 276 | put-heavy |
52 | 271 | put-heavy |
That stack builds a 55–58 “pin shelf” heading into expiry, with max pain at $54 for the weekly and $52 for the monthly. This is classic short-dated hedging behaviour: keep exposure, insure the tail, roll week by week.
The 24 Oct at-the-money straddle prices an expected move of ± $3.26 (≈ ± 6.1 %), mapping a $50 – $56.5 range around a $54.5 spot. That’s the market’s “cone of comfort” — stay inside it, and theta rules; break it, and gamma takes over. Beyond October, the term structure flattens; November vol relaxes fast, implying traders see this as noise, not a new regime.
Important note: The strategies and examples described are purely for educational purposes. They assist in shaping your thought process and should not be replicated or implemented without careful consideration. Every investor must conduct their own due diligence, considering their financial situation, risk tolerance, and investment objectives before making decisions. Remember, investing in the stock market carries risks, so make informed decisions.
Market view | Structure idea | Why it fits current surface |
Bullish / range-biased | Put-credit spread or call-diagonal | Put wing is overpriced; you can sell rich vol or fund cheap upside. |
Neutral / pin | Broken-wing fly near 55–58 | Decay works hardest inside the OI shelf; defined tail risk. |
Bearish / hedge | Call-credit spread or Nov put-debit spread | Call vol cheaper; monthly tenor avoids paying peak skew. |
Skew / vol view | Calendarised risk reversal (short weekly put / long Nov put) | Express skew normalisation without taking directional delta. |
URA’s chain is now a microcosm of the energy market’s next phase: AI-driven power demand meets nuclear scarcity. Volatility is high because traders care — not because they’re afraid. For options desks, that’s gold: ample liquidity, rich short-dated premium, and a story big enough to last longer than one expiry.
Short-term skew in URA isn’t a warning; it’s a signal that the market’s finally pricing nuclear energy as essential infrastructure. For traders, it’s a live, liquid case study in how narrative volatility behaves — and how to trade around it.
With the Uranium ETF deep dive complete, we now turn our attention to the broader market. Below is our weekly scan of the top 20 names by 1-month open interest growth, filtered for those with at least 100,000 in options volume.
These are the tickers where traders are most aggressively positioning, rolling, or hedging—and the shifts can offer early clues about narrative changes, speculative flows, or hedging intensity. From critical minerals and crypto miners to automation and AI, these OI movers often reflect more than just price action.
Rank | Ticker | Name | Last | IV Rank (%) | Total OI | 1M OI % Chg | Options Vol | P/C Vol |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | CAN | Canaan Inc ADR | 2.05 | 21.6% | 330.5K | 35.7% | 151.5K | 0.13 |
2 | POET | Poet Technologies Inc | 7.59 | 58.1% | 767.3K | 34.8% | 109.0K | 0.04 |
3 | ABAT | American Battery Technology Co. | 6.72 | 29.9% | 150.3K | 32.7% | 104.6K | 1.70 |
4 | $VIX | CBOE Volatility Index | 18.23 | 4.9% | 16.2M | 23.5% | 1.3M | 0.82 |
5 | GLD | Gold SPDR | 403.15 | 92.2% | 5.7M | 15.5% | 1.3M | 0.72 |
6 | BITF | Bitfarms Ltd | 4.98 | 15.5% | 1.2M | 15.4% | 194.2K | 0.35 |
7 | WULF | Terawulf Inc | 13.85 | 19.0% | 2.0M | 12.3% | 110.7K | 0.20 |
8 | BULL | Webull Corp Cl A | 11.48 | 19.0% | 1.3M | 12.2% | 283.8K | 0.13 |
9 | PYPL | Paypal Holdings | 69.20 | 52.6% | 1.9M | 11.8% | 105.3K | 0.29 |
10 | PFE | Pfizer Inc | 24.69 | 31.2% | 3.3M | 9.2% | 158.0K | 0.17 |
11 | NVTS | Navitas Semiconductor Corp | 17.10 | 75.4% | 446.7K | 9.0% | 130.9K | 0.40 |
12 | SOXS | Semiconductor Bear -3X ETF Direxion | 3.86 | 28.8% | 610.3K | 4.5% | 112.0K | 0.13 |
13 | CIFR | Cipher Mining Inc | 19.91 | 82.9% | 1.4M | 3.5% | 136.0K | 0.17 |
14 | CLSK | Cleanspark Inc | 20.40 | 57.3% | 1.3M | 2.9% | 137.3K | 0.29 |
15 | IBIT | Ishares Bitcoin Trust ETF | 62.93 | 42.3% | 7.0M | 2.5% | 697.5K | 0.40 |
16 | BAC | Bank of America Corp | 52.04 | 18.6% | 2.7M | 2.4% | 143.4K | 0.62 |
17 | SLV | Silver Trust Ishares | 47.72 | 81.5% | 7.0M | 1.7% | 950.1K | 0.35 |
18 | GDX | Vaneck Gold Miners ETF | 80.36 | 72.9% | 2.5M | 1.7% | 110.8K | 0.58 |
19 | PLUG | Plug Power Inc | 3.40 | 58.4% | 1.7M | 1.6% | 107.3K | 0.15 |
20 | CORZ | Core Scientific Inc | 18.81 | 50.0% | 1.9M | 1.3% | 172.1K | 0.09 |
Note: Table now ranks US-listed underlyings by highest one‑month OI change, filtered to daily options volume > 100,000.
This week’s shifts in open interest highlight a blend of speculative activity in smaller-cap names and renewed defensive positioning in established hedges. At the top of the list, Canaan (CAN), Poet Technologies (POET), and American Battery Technology (ABAT) stand out with month-on-month OI gains between 30–36%. The move suggests traders are gravitating toward niche growth and energy-transition themes, where news flow and volatility often travel hand in hand. ABAT’s unusually high put/call ratio near 1.7 hints at a hedging element beneath the surface.
Volatility exposure also returned to favour through the CBOE Volatility Index ($VIX), which saw a 23% rise in OI as traders rebuilt protection following its recent drop below 20. Meanwhile, gold’s continued draw is evident in the GLD ETF, where open interest rose 15% and implied volatility sits near the top of its annual range. Together, $VIX and GLD point to an undercurrent of caution even as equity indices stabilise.
Crypto-related assets remain another clear thread. Bitfarms (BITF), Terawulf (WULF), and Webull Corp (BULL) joined IBIT, Cipher Mining (CIFR), Cleanspark (CLSK), and Core Scientific (CORZ) among the most active contracts, reflecting steady institutional engagement in digital-asset proxies. For most of these, implied volatility sits mid-range—offering traders room to express directional views without paying extreme premiums.
Large-cap names such as PayPal (PYPL), Pfizer (PFE), and Bank of America (BAC) feature in the second half of the table, each showing modest OI growth but subdued volatility. Their presence reinforces how flows have broadened beyond the pure speculative end of the market into more traditional sectors.
The dispersion in implied volatility is notable. GLD, SLV, and CIFR all show IV ranks above 80%, suggesting expensive premium levels, while BAC, WULF, and CAN remain below 20%, implying that volatility pricing still favours selective selling in lower-beta names.
Put/call ratios help separate hedging from speculation. GLD and $VIX display elevated ratios—clear signs of protection building—whereas POET, CORZ, and SOXS exhibit extremely low readings, typical of call-heavy speculative interest.
Overall, the picture is one of a split market mood: defensive positioning in gold and volatility, offset by sustained appetite for high-risk and crypto-linked plays. Open interest is rising in both camps, underscoring that traders are active but divided—building protection with one hand, and chasing exposure with the other.
Today’s leaderboard tilts toward precious metals and crypto-linked exposure, with a side note of index volatility ($VIX) seeing renewed OI growth. Elevated IV Ranks in GLD/SLV/GDX frame a costlier premium backdrop, while several crypto miners show rising interest on moderate IV. Put/call skews are mixed, suggesting selective hedging rather than broad risk-off. As always, OI is a map of positioning — not a price forecast — and should be read alongside catalysts, liquidity, and realised volatility.