Advanced Micro Devices closed at 552.05 USD, up 6.61%. The session was marked by significant large options trades, including a massive $712.00 million bear call spread, which dominated the flow and signaled a cautious institutional stance.
Options Indicators
AMD’s implied volatility is 87.35%, and with an IV percentile of 99.20%, current option volatility sits at an extremely elevated level versus its own historical range, indicating that options are priced expensively. At the same time, the IV/HV ratio of 0.99 suggests implied volatility is roughly in line with realized volatility rather than dramatically overstating it, but from a percentile standpoint the market is still assigning a very rich premium to AMD options. The Call/Put volume ratio is 1.54.
Large Trades
A bearish call spread worth $712.00 million was the dominant large trade of the day, structured as short 20,000 AMD August 21, 2026 $380 calls against long 20,000 October 16, 2026 $450 calls. This is a bear call spread executed for a net credit, with the short call leg bringing in $391.00 million and the long call hedge costing $321.00 million. Strategically, this points to a bearish-to-neutral stance, aiming to collect premium while defining upside risk through the higher-strike long call. The structure suggests the trader does not expect AMD to sustain a move materially above the spread range over time, and the use of the long-dated hedge indicates a controlled bearish positioning rather than an outright naked call sale.
A PUT buy worth $3.39 million targeted the July 10, 2026 $555 strike, with 1,996 contracts purchased. With AMD referenced at $552.05, this put is in the money, making it an outright bearish position with immediate downside sensitivity. As a single-leg long put, the trade reflects either a direct downside bet or short-term protective hedging, but in either case it expresses caution on near-term price action and adds to the session’s negative options tone.
Overall sentiment was clearly bearish, with total bullish large-trade flow at $0.00 million versus bearish flow at $715.39 million, leaving a net difference of $715.39 million to the bearish side. The directional judgment is decisively negative, as essentially all meaningful large-trade activity leaned bearish, led overwhelmingly by the massive net-credit bear call spread and reinforced by the in-the-money put purchase. Together, these trades indicate that large participants were positioning for capped upside, downside risk, or both, rather than preparing for a bullish continuation in AMD.
Strategy Reference
A trader looking to sell premium in this elevated volatility environment while minimizing margin requirements could consider a bear call spread; for instance, selling an out-of-the-money call around the $600 strike and buying a higher-strike call for protection defines risk and capital outlay.