Don't you think with an option expiration every week on the indexes that it dilutes the max pain theory on the "regular" expiration?
Quote from sle:
I am a big seller of the whole max pain concept.
Quote from ForexForex:
With option expiry this week I'm looking forward to your picks. Which stocks do you follow?
Quote from sle:
At the moment I only trade ETFs, futures options and OTC in a very different asset class, so there is very little i can offer to you there.
This is so odd, I am not even sure how to reactQuote from ForexForex:
Lots of theory, but no results.
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Quote from dhpar:
if you don't like it then don't use it. that's all one can say.
every trader has his own tools... e.g. i do not believe in quite a few technical indicators...
btw i do not use option pain for trading gamma at all. i use it mainly for trading delta in stocks i know inside-out...

In numerical fields (e.g. engineering, finance etc) here is reality and there is illusion. You can say it "well, you don't believe it, so don't use it" about everything, for example I know people who use lunar cycles for their trading.Quote from dhpar:
if you don't like it then don't use it. that's all one can say.
every trader has his own tools... e.g. i do not believe in quite a few technical indicators...
Out of curiosity, have you verified for yourself using whatever statistical tools you like that it's a viable indicator? because it could you be your brain (which knows these stocks pretty well) playing tricks on you.Quote from dhpar:
btw i do not use option pain for trading gamma at all. i use it mainly for trading delta in stocks i know inside-out...
Quote from sle:
I am a big seller of the whole max pain concept. Mainly because it is meaningless unless you know what strikes are delta hedged and what strikes are kept naked. Also, it would only matter if the open interest in a given strike is meaningfully larger then ADV.
There was a concept of "put bombers" in the hedge fund community a few years ago (before the Max Pain of 2008). A fund would identify a lowish liquidity stock with high implied vol and sell a lot of puts to the dealers. Since the dealer would be forced to monetize the vol and trade a large percent of ADV, realized vol would fall significantly. You could only guess what happend to these people in 08...
True, though we are starting to deviate from the whole max pain thing.Quote from rew:
I agree. The max pain charts only make sense if you assume all the options are unhedged, which is nonsense. A market maker doesn't necessarily lose money on a short ITM option if he hedged it properly.
Quote from sle:
True, though we are starting to deviate from the whole max pain thing.
I think (never done it) that in some assets if you keep track of all institutional purchases (given that most bookies will give you a spam of all trades they are doing, in some sh*t form like "grnH86/88 cs +paper") you could probably have a heat-map of all MM long/MM short positions. If you know of some strike that MMs are very long, you might want to sell these strikes in hope that their delta hedging would squash the realized vol. Similarly, MM hedging a large short position would amplify the realized vol.