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A Options Chain by Expiration – Open Interest & Put/Call Ratio

Explore the A options chain aggregated by expiration date, with call and put open interest, total OI and put/call ratios. Use this overview to spot where options positioning is most concentrated and which expirations carry bullish, bearish or neutral sentiment for A.

Market Sentiment from A Options by Expiration Date

The table below aggregates A options data by expiration date, including call volume, put volume, total open interest and the put/call ratio. Each row is assigned a sentiment label and numerical sentiment score, highlighting expirations where positioning is extremely bullish, defensive or balanced. Click on an expiration date to drill down into the detailed options chain for that maturity.

Expiration Date Call OI Put OI Total Open Interest Put/Call Ratio
2026-04-17 1044 2302 3346 2.205
2026-05-15 732 1093 1825 1.493
2026-06-18 2000 1567 3567 0.783
2026-08-21 226 609 835 2.695
2026-09-18 3290 919 4209 0.279
2026-11-20 1 0 1 0.000
2026-12-18 180 181 361 1.006
2027-01-15 3411 1418 4829 0.416
2027-03-19 183 84 267 0.459

How the Options Sentiment Score Is Calculated

This sentiment framework evaluates market bias for A based on aggregated options data by expiration date. The key metrics are:

  • Put/Call Ratio (PCR): Compares put and call activity. A higher PCR usually indicates more defensive or bearish positioning, while a lower PCR suggests bullish call demand.
  • Open Interest (OI): Represents the number of outstanding option contracts. Higher open interest reflects strong market attention, hedging activity or speculative positioning around A.
  • Unusual activity ⚠️: Expirations with extreme PCR or unusually high OI are flagged with a warning icon, signaling concentrated bets, hedging pressure or potential event-driven risk.

The sentiment score combines PCR and OI into a 0–100 scale, then classifies each expiration into intuitive labels such as Strong Bullish, Moderate Bullish, Neutral, Moderate Bearish, Strong Bearish. Higher scores reflect more aggressive bullish positioning in A options, while lower scores highlight more defensive or bearish structures.