NQ Futures Max Pain

Live max pain strike, pain curve, pin probability, and dealer alignment for NQ (E-mini Nasdaq-100) futures. Computed on the NQ options-on-futures chain, this identifies the OI-weighted settlement strike where option holders collectively lose the most money at expiration - a magnet for expiration-day price action.

Price
30,269.62
Regime
positive gamma

NQ Futures Pain Curve

NQ Futures Max Pain - Live Analysis

This page shows real-time max pain analysis for NQ (E-mini Nasdaq-100) futures, updated every 15 seconds during CME trading hours.

Why max pain matters for NQ: options dealers collectively hold the short side of large notional options exposure on the NQ future. As expiration approaches, their delta-hedging activity tends to push price toward the strike where they have the least payout obligation - the max pain strike. This is not a guarantee, but a probabilistic tendency that's strongest when NQ has high open interest concentrated near the max pain level and dealer gamma is positive. Because NQ is computed on its own options-on-futures chain (not SPY/SPX relabeled), the levels are quoted in NQ index points using the CME multiplier.

Volatility & flow context: NQ ATM implied volatility is 24.9% - this drives the expected move that defines whether max pain is realistically reachable.

FlashAlpha computes NQ max pain from live options-on-futures data across all expirations, priced with the Black-76 model on the NQ future. The pain curve above shows total option holder loss at each candidate settlement price; the minimum is the max pain strike. Compare against the NDX cash index to gauge basis. Sign up free to unlock the full pain curve and pin probability, or use the Max Pain API to pull NQ max pain data programmatically.

Frequently Asked Questions - NQ Futures Max Pain

What is NQ futures max pain today?

Max pain is the OI-weighted settlement strike where total option holder intrinsic value is minimized at expiration - the strike at which dealers and option sellers collectively lose the least money. For NQ it is computed on the E-mini Nasdaq-100 options-on-futures chain (not SPY/SPX relabeled). Many traders use it as a magnet for expiration-day price action.

Is NQ max pain a reliable price target?

Max pain is a probabilistic tendency, not a guarantee. It works best when (1) pin probability is above 60, (2) dealer alignment is converging (max pain near gamma flip and between walls), (3) gamma regime is positive, and (4) there's no major catalyst before expiration. Because NQ trades nearly 24 hours on CME Globex, positioning can shift overnight. For NQ these conditions can be checked above using the dealer alignment card.

How is NQ max pain calculated?

For each candidate settlement price K, you sum the intrinsic value across all open call and put contracts on the NQ future: Pain(K) = sum of max(K - K_put, 0) * OI_put + sum of max(K_call - K, 0) * OI_call. The OI-weighted strike that minimises this total is max pain. FlashAlpha computes this live across all NQ options-on-futures expirations and surfaces it via the Max Pain API.

What's the difference between max pain and gamma flip?

Max pain is based on open interest and minimises total option payouts at expiration. Gamma flip is based on OI weighted by gamma and the spot price - it marks where dealer hedging behavior changes from supportive (positive gamma) to amplifying (negative gamma). For NQ, dollar gamma uses the CME index-point multiplier rather than the 100x equity multiplier. When NQ's max pain and gamma flip converge, the pin signal is strongest because both forces point to the same level.

What is Max Pain?

Max pain is the strike price where the total intrinsic value of all open options (calls and puts) is minimized at expiration. At this strike, the most options expire worthless and dealers/option sellers keep the most premium. For NQ it is the OI-weighted settlement level on the E-mini Nasdaq-100 options-on-futures chain.

The theory: dealers' delta-hedging activity creates real buying and selling pressure that tends to push the underlying toward the strike where they have the least payout obligation. This effect is strongest near expiration when gamma is highest.

Reading the Pain Curve

  • Sharp V-shape: Concentrated OI, strong pin expected. Good for iron condors centered at max pain.
  • Flat curve: Dispersed OI across many strikes, weak pin. Max pain is less predictive.
  • Asymmetric curve: One side steeper. Put-heavy = downside pinning pressure; call-heavy = upside resistance.
  • Converging dealer alignment: Max pain near gamma flip, between walls = highest-conviction setup.