@Robert Morse thank you for this clarification.
I would say that using option volume to determine the short term direction of an underlying is VERY hard. You have to make a number of assumptions to make it valuable.
-Was the trade initiated by the buyer or seller?
-Was it to open or close?
-Was it hedged with the underlying?
-Was it to hedge a past trade?
-Does the customer know more than I do or the market in general?
-Because the customer has a large account, does that make him better at predicting stock movement?
I know that the Najarian Brothers from CNBC use option flow to help them trade, but I also expect they are getting more "color" on "prints" that you will have access to.If you use option flow as a tool, great. As your only tool, you will find that you are jumping in after rumors and exiting after everyone else does. I would avoid that.
No. Your software will show trade volume vs contracts. The OCC counts a buy contract and a sell contract as two, which most of us find confusing, but they charge both sides.
This is also useful to know: the open interest lags by one day. This might be too slow, too late, depending on the trading strategy.The OI is only updated on the next day though, so when trades are done, the OI changes the next day.
This is also useful to know: the open interest lags by one day. This might be too slow, too late, depending on the trading strategy.
Not by a full day. At least for US options OI is available before the next day's open, usually by ~5:00 am EST. You can pick it up on the OCC report download page at no charge.This is also useful to know: the open interest lags by one day. T.
@RobertMorse: one day log changes in OI ratios and ratios of ratios may be predictive of one day forward log changes in the price of the underlying.
One of the biggest mistakes I have made repeatedly in the past was to try to reckon things out from first principals. I ended up dismissing proposed features or indicators that were, counter intuitively, useful or predictive of my chosen dependent variable(s).How do you know if the person that initiated the trade, bought them or sold them?