Dealer Hedging Concepts
Dealer hedging refers to how options market makers and large sellers manage the risk of the option books they run, typically by delta-hedging with the underlying or futures, and whether the market as a whole is net long or short gamma determines whether that hedging tends to dampen or amplify price moves into expiry.
Quick answer: Dealer hedging refers to how options market makers and large sellers manage the risk of the option books they run, typically by delta-hedging with the underlying or futures, and whether the market as a whole is net long or short gamma determines whether that hedging tends to dampen or amplify price moves into expiry.
In simple words
Whenever a dealer, a market maker or large institutional option seller, sells you an option, they usually don't want to carry the resulting directional risk, so they hedge it — buying or selling the underlying or futures to offset their exposure. As the underlying moves, that hedge needs constant rebalancing, and the direction of those rebalancing trades depends on whether the dealer is net long or short gamma on their overall book. This dealer hedging activity, multiplied across the whole market, can itself influence how the underlying behaves, especially in the concentrated final days before expiry.
Purpose
Understanding dealer hedging explains a layer of expiry-day and short-dated price behaviour that pure supply-and-demand analysis misses — why some expiries feel unusually calm and 'sticky' near a level, while others see moves accelerate sharply once a threshold is crossed.
Visual explanation
Dealer Hedging Concepts
Whether dealers are net long or short gamma shapes whether their hedging flows dampen or amplify moves into expiry.
Professional explanation
Delta hedging: the basic mechanism
A dealer who has sold options is typically short gamma and hedges by trading the underlying: as the underlying rises, a short call's delta rises, so the dealer must buy more of the underlying to stay hedged; as it falls, they sell. This means a short-gamma dealer's hedging trades tend to be in the same direction as the move, buying into strength, selling into weakness, which can amplify the move. Conversely, a dealer who is net long gamma, having bought more options than sold, hedges by trading against the move, selling into strength, buying into weakness, which tends to dampen it.
Why gamma exposure concentrates near expiry
As discussed in gamma risk, at-the-money gamma spikes in an option's final days. Because a large share of market-wide option activity clusters around the current, at-the-money strikes into expiry, dealer hedging flows from that concentrated gamma become proportionally larger relative to the day's regular trading volume, meaning hedging-driven flows can have an outsized influence on price action specifically in the last one or two sessions of an expiry cycle, compared to earlier in the month.
Long-gamma versus short-gamma regimes
When dealers are collectively net long gamma, which tends to happen when the broader market is heavily buying options after a volatility spike, their dampening hedging flows can contribute to a market pinning near a level and staying calmer. When dealers are collectively net short gamma, which tends to happen when the market is heavily selling or writing options for income, a common pattern in index option chains, their amplifying hedging flows can contribute to sharper, faster moves once a threshold is broken. Estimating the market's aggregate gamma exposure, sometimes called GEX, is a specialised, imperfect exercise used by some professional and quant desks.
Vega hedging alongside gamma
Dealers also carry vega exposure from the options they've sold or bought and may hedge that separately, for instance using other options or volatility-linked instruments, since implied volatility itself moves independently of the underlying's direction. Near expiry, as discussed under volatility near expiry, IV crush and term-structure shifts around events add another layer that dealers must manage on top of their gamma hedging, particularly for large near-dated positions.
Practical example (Nifty / Bank Nifty)
Illustrative — Nifty spot 25,000, lot size 75
If Nifty market makers are collectively short gamma around the 25,000 strike into expiry, a rally through 25,000 can force them to buy futures to stay hedged, adding to upward pressure and potentially accelerating the move — a pattern sometimes cited to explain why breakouts through heavily-optioned strikes can move faster than usual right into expiry.
Conversely, in a week where India VIX has spiked and the broader market has been net buying puts for protection, making dealers more net long gamma, Nifty can show a stickier, more range-bound pattern into expiry, as dealer hedging flows work to dampen rather than extend moves.
Advantages
- Understanding dealer positioning gives a deeper read on why some expiries move sharply while others stay range-bound.
- Recognising short-gamma amplification helps explain and anticipate accelerating moves once a key strike is broken.
- Awareness of long-gamma dampening explains 'sticky', pinning behaviour around heavily-optioned levels.
Limitations
- Estimating aggregate dealer gamma exposure, GEX-style analysis, is imprecise and not based on fully public data in India.
- The effect is probabilistic and can be overwhelmed by strong news flow or macro moves.
- It requires understanding several layered concepts — gamma, delta hedging, positioning — that are easy to oversimplify.
Why it matters in practice
- Treat dealer-hedging effects as a contributing factor to expiry-day behaviour, not a mechanical rule to trade against.
- Expect potentially sharper follow-through once a heavily-shorted strike is decisively broken, all else equal.
- Expect potentially calmer, more range-bound action around a level where the broader market has been buying protection.
- Use this concept alongside open interest and max pain, not as a replacement for them.
Common mistakes
- Treating dealer-hedging theory as a precise, tradable signal rather than a probabilistic explanatory concept.
- Assuming dealers are always net short gamma, when the regime actually varies with market conditions and positioning.
- Ignoring that estimates of aggregate dealer gamma exposure are approximate, not exact, in the Indian market.
- Overlooking that strong news or macro flows can dominate and override any hedging-flow effect.
Professional usage
Professional volatility and derivatives desks think in terms of the market's aggregate gamma exposure when assessing likely expiry-day behaviour, recognising that dealer hedging flows are a real, if imperfectly measurable, contributor to price action, distinct from but related to open interest and max pain. They use this as one lens among several, combined with direct positioning data and market context, rather than relying on it in isolation.
Key takeaways
- Dealer hedging is how option sellers, market makers and large writers, manage their risk, typically by trading the underlying to stay delta-neutral.
- Whether dealers are net long or short gamma determines whether their hedging flows tend to dampen or amplify price moves.
- This effect concentrates near expiry because at-the-money gamma, and therefore hedging flow, spikes in the final sessions.
Frequently asked questions
What is dealer hedging in options?
What is short gamma for a dealer?
What is long gamma for a dealer?
Does dealer hedging amplify or dampen market moves?
Why does dealer hedging matter more near expiry?
What is GEX?
Can dealer hedging cause a market to 'pin' near a strike?
Is dealer hedging the same as max pain?
Do individual retail trades cause the same effect as dealer hedging?
How can I tell if dealers are net long or short gamma?
Does dealer hedging explain every expiry-day move?
Why is dealer hedging considered an advanced topic?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Dealer Hedging Concepts.
Why do markets sometimes move faster right before expiry?
What does it mean when dealers are 'short gamma'?
Can option sellers' hedging affect the index itself?
Why does the market sometimes stay very calm right at expiry?
Is dealer hedging something retail traders should worry about?
Sources & references
Last reviewed 11 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Exchange rules change; verify current conventions on NSE/BSE.