What Is Unusual Options Activity?
Unusual options activity (UOA) refers to options trades where the volume traded on a given day is significantly higher than the existing open interest — often 2x, 5x, or even 10x greater. This imbalance signals that new money is flowing into a position aggressively, rather than existing holders closing their trades.
When a single options trade involves hundreds of contracts and millions of dollars in premium, it's usually not a retail trader — it's an institution, hedge fund, or highly informed trader making a directional bet. That's why unusual options flow is so closely watched: it can hint at where smart money thinks a stock is headed before the broader market catches on.
Key insight: UOA doesn't mean someone knows something illegal. It often reflects institutional portfolio hedges, earnings plays, or systematic strategies — but the scale and timing of these trades can still provide a meaningful edge when analyzed correctly.
How to Read the Options Flow Scanner
Each row in our live UOA scanner contains everything you need to evaluate a trade. Here's what each column means:
- Date / Time: When the trade hit the tape. During active sessions, trades appear within seconds of printing.
- Trade Summary: The ticker, contract type (CALL or PUT), strike price, expiration date, price paid per contract, open interest, total premium, and volume/OI ratio.
- Sentiment: BULLISH = calls bought aggressively. BEARISH = puts bought aggressively.
Scan for trades with high premium totals and high vol/OI ratios. A $2.3M trade at 7x volume/OI — like the MSTR trade you might see on the live feed — means someone bought 1,365 contracts and there were only 172 existing open contracts. That's an overwhelming majority of new money entering the position.
Volume vs Open Interest: The Core Signal
This is the engine behind UOA scanning. Understanding it deeply separates traders who use flow data effectively from those who don't.
Open Interest (OI)
Open interest is the total number of outstanding options contracts that have not been settled or closed. If 500 traders each hold 1 contract, OI = 500. It resets each day based on net positions.
Volume
Volume is the number of contracts traded in a session. Unlike OI, volume can exceed OI when new contracts are opened aggressively during the day.
The Ratio
When volume is 5x the open interest, it means 5x more contracts changed hands than previously existed as open positions. That's a strong signal that new directional money is entering — not someone simply closing an old hedge.
| Vol/OI Ratio | Interpretation | Conviction Level |
|---|---|---|
| 1.0 – 1.9x | Normal. Could be closing activity or light new interest. | Low |
| 2.0 – 4.9x | Unusual. New money entering, worth watching. | Moderate |
| 5.0 – 9.9x | Highly unusual. Strong conviction signal. | High |
| 10x+ | Extreme. Someone is very determined to own this position. | Very High |
Bullish vs Bearish Unusual Options Signals
Not every big options trade is a directional bet. Here's how the sentiment tags work in our scanner:
| Signal | What It Means | Example |
|---|---|---|
| BULLISH | CALL options bought at or above the ask price. The buyer paid up — they wanted in immediately. Signals upside expectation. | $AAPL Jun 200 CALLS bought at $3.5 vs OI of 800 → 4.2x ratio, $2.1M premium |
| BEARISH | PUT options bought at or above the ask price. The buyer paid a premium to own downside protection or bet on a decline. | $SPY Jun 500 PUTS bought at $4.2 vs OI of 2,400 → 3.1x ratio, $3.8M premium |
Note: Not all large put activity is bearish positioning. Institutions frequently buy puts as portfolio hedges — not because they expect a crash, but because regulations or risk management require downside protection. Context matters: if a stock is already falling, large put buying reads differently than puts bought at an all-time high.
Using Historical Win Rate Data to Trade UOA
Here's where most retail traders leave money on the table: they see unusual options flow and follow it blindly. But not all unusual flow wins. The question isn't just "is this unusual?" — it's "how often has this type of flow paid off historically?"
That's the insight behind C Analytics by IVtrades. Instead of just showing you the flow, it layers historical win-rate intelligence on top of every alert. For any given UOA signal, you can see:
- How often similar setups have resulted in the stock moving in the predicted direction
- What the average return has been on trades with similar characteristics
- What the expected value of following the signal looks like before you risk a dollar
How to Trade Unusual Options Flow: A Simple Framework
Here's a repeatable process for evaluating UOA signals before you trade:
- Filter for size first. Only consider trades with $500K+ in total premium. This removes most noise.
- Check the ratio. 2x is the floor. 5x+ is more compelling. Higher ratios mean more urgency.
- Understand the direction. Is this a call or put? Is it near-term expiry (speculative) or longer-dated (hedging)?
- Look at the stock's chart. Is the UOA signal aligned with a technical breakout or breakdown? Confirmation from price action matters.
- Check historical win rate. Use a tool like C Analytics to see how often similar flow has paid off before committing capital.
- Size appropriately. Even high-probability setups fail. Risk only what you can afford to lose on a single trade.
The #1 rule: Unusual options flow is a starting point, not a trade signal in isolation. Your job is to confirm the signal with additional data before entering. The traders who make money long-term are the ones who know their edge before they size into a position.