Dealer Positioning Concepts
Dealer positioning refers to the aggregate hedging exposure that market-makers and large dealers accumulate as the counterparty to public option order flow — a framework used to understand why certain hedging-driven flows tend to appear around expiry.
Quick answer: Dealer positioning refers to the aggregate hedging exposure that market-makers and large dealers accumulate as the counterparty to public option order flow — a framework used to understand why certain hedging-driven flows tend to appear around expiry.
In simple words
When you buy an option, someone has to sell it to you — very often a market-maker or dealer whose business is providing that liquidity, not necessarily taking a directional view. To stay roughly neutral, the dealer then hedges using the underlying and adjusts that hedge as prices move and time passes. 'Dealer positioning' is the general concept of estimating what dealers, in aggregate, are likely holding and how they are likely to hedge it — which shapes some of the mechanical buying and selling that shows up in the market, especially near expiry.
Purpose
Understanding dealer positioning as a concept helps explain market behaviour that looks otherwise puzzling — like a market that seems to resist moving past a heavily-traded strike, or one that suddenly accelerates once a level breaks — by connecting it to the practical hedging needs of the people who took the other side of the public's option trades.
Visual explanation
Dealer Positioning Concepts
As the public buys or sells options, dealers take the other side and hedge — their aggregate positioning shapes expiry-day flows.
Professional explanation
Why dealers hedge instead of taking a view
Market-makers and dealer desks generally aim to earn the bid-ask spread and manage risk, not to bet on direction. When they sell options to the public, they typically hedge the resulting delta, gamma and vega exposure using the underlying and other options, rather than carrying the raw directional risk. This hedging activity is a byproduct of providing liquidity, not a signal about their market view.
Delta hedging and its knock-on effect
As an option's delta changes with the underlying's move (this rate of change is gamma), a dealer's hedge needs constant rebalancing — buying or selling the underlying to stay neutral. Aggregated across many dealers and many options, this rebalancing is real order flow that can contribute to (though not solely cause) price behaviour like resistance at heavily-hedged strikes or accelerated moves once those levels give way.
Vega and event-driven dealer flows
Dealers also hedge vega — exposure to implied volatility changes — which becomes especially relevant around known events (results, policy announcements) when implied volatility itself is expected to move sharply. Positioning and hedging tied to vega can add another layer of dealer-driven flow distinct from the delta/gamma hedging discussed for gamma exposure.
Why this is an inference, not a disclosed fact
Exchanges and dealers do not publish their actual books, so 'dealer positioning' as discussed publicly is always an inference — built from public OI, volume and pricing data plus reasonable assumptions about typical dealer behaviour (for example, that dealers are usually net short the options retail traders are net long). It is a useful mental model, not a confirmed account of any specific desk's actual position.
Practical example (Nifty / Bank Nifty)
Illustrative — Nifty spot 25,000, lot size 75
If a very large number of retail traders buy Nifty 25,200 CE ahead of expiry, the dealers who sold those calls are, under typical assumptions, left needing to hedge — buying Nifty futures or the underlying basket as spot approaches 25,200 to stay delta-neutral, and adjusting that hedge continuously as gamma rises near the strike into expiry. This is inferred dealer behaviour based on observed public buying, not a confirmed report of any dealer's actual book.
In the Indian market, entities like proprietary trading desks, FIIs and large domestic institutions can act as effective market-makers/dealers in Nifty and Bank Nifty options, and their aggregate hedging flows are inferred by analysts from NSE's public OI, volume and price data rather than from any disclosed positioning.
Limitations
- Dealer positioning is always inferred from public data and reasonable assumptions, never confirmed directly, since actual books are not published.
- Not all large sellers of options are pure hedgers — some carry directional risk, which complicates any simple 'dealers are always hedging' assumption.
- The concept explains general tendencies in flow, not a specific price target or guaranteed move.
Why it matters in practice
- Treat dealer positioning as an explanatory framework for observed flows, not as confirmed insider information.
- Consider delta/gamma hedging flows around heavily-traded strikes as one possible contributor to price behaviour, alongside other factors.
- Watch for elevated vega-hedging-related flow around major scheduled events, not just around expiry.
- Combine this framework with OI, volume and gamma-exposure reading rather than relying on it alone.
Common mistakes
- Treating inferred dealer positioning as if it were confirmed, disclosed information.
- Assuming every large option seller is a pure hedger with no directional view.
- Using the concept to justify a specific price prediction rather than a general behavioural tendency.
- Ignoring that non-hedging flows (news, large directional funds) can dominate over dealer hedging on any given day.
Professional usage
Professionals use dealer-positioning concepts as one explanatory lens for observed order flow and price behaviour around heavily-traded strikes and events, always caveating that the underlying dealer book is inferred, not disclosed, and they weigh it alongside OI, gamma exposure, PCR and price action rather than treating it as a standalone edge.
Key takeaways
- Dealer positioning is the inferred hedging exposure market-makers accumulate as the counterparty to public option trades.
- Delta/gamma hedging and vega hedging by dealers can contribute to observed flows around heavily-traded strikes and events, especially near expiry.
- It is always an inference from public data and typical assumptions, not confirmed or disclosed dealer information.
Frequently asked questions
What is dealer positioning in options?
Why do dealers hedge their option books?
What is delta hedging?
How does gamma affect a dealer's hedge?
What is vega hedging for a dealer?
Is dealer positioning publicly disclosed by exchanges?
Do all option sellers hedge like dealers?
Can dealer hedging cause a strike to act like resistance?
How is dealer positioning related to gamma exposure (GEX)?
Does dealer positioning matter more around expiry?
Who acts as a dealer in Indian index options?
Should I trade based on assumed dealer positioning?
Is vega hedging relevant outside of expiry week?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Dealer Positioning Concepts.
What does dealer positioning mean?
Why do dealers buy or sell the underlying when options trade?
Is dealer positioning public information?
Can dealer hedging make the market move faster?
Should I rely on dealer positioning to make trading decisions?
Sources & references
Last reviewed 11 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Exchange rules change; verify current conventions on NSE/BSE.