AMGN GEX & Options Analytics

AMGN implied volatility, gamma exposure (GEX), dealer positioning, volatility surface, and options flow.

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AMGN Options Analytics Dashboard

AMGN snapshot (Mar 17, 2026 12:39 AM ET): Price $369.06. ATM IV 37.6%. HV20 23.8%. VRP +13.8 (options expensive). Net GEX 29.2M. Gamma regime: negative_gamma (dealers short gamma — moves amplified). Gamma flip: $372. Call wall: $370. Put wall: $360.

This page provides real-time options analytics for AMGN, including:

  • Implied Volatility (IV) — ATM IV, 20-day and 60-day historical volatility, IV percentile rank, and volatility risk premium (VRP).
  • Gamma Exposure (GEX) — Net dealer gamma exposure, top strikes by gamma notional, call wall, put wall, and gamma flip level. Indicates whether dealers are long or short gamma and the resulting regime (mean-reverting vs. trend-amplifying).
  • Dealer Positioning — DEX (delta exposure), VEX (vanna exposure), and CHEX (charm exposure) show how dealer hedging flows respond to price moves, volatility shifts, and time decay.
  • Volatility Surface — SVI-calibrated IV heatmap across strikes and expirations, 25-delta skew, smile ratio, and term structure.
  • Options Flow — Put/call ratio, total volume and open interest, and net premium flow direction.
  • Macro Context — VIX level, Fed Funds rate, and 10Y yield for broader market context.

AMGN Implied Volatility & Term Structure

Track AMGN ATM implied volatility, 20-day and 60-day historical (realized) volatility, IV percentile rank, and the volatility risk premium (VRP). The IV term structure shows how implied volatility changes across expirations — contango (upward sloping) is the normal state; backwardation signals near-term event risk such as earnings or macro catalysts. IV-RV spreads reveal whether AMGN options are cheap or expensive relative to actual realized moves.

AMGN Gamma Exposure (GEX) & Key Levels

AMGN net dealer gamma exposure quantifies whether market makers are long or short gamma. In a positive gamma regime, dealers buy dips and sell rips, dampening volatility. In negative gamma, dealers amplify moves. The call wall is the strike with the highest call gamma — it acts as resistance. The put wall is the highest put gamma strike — it acts as support. The gamma flip level marks where dealer positioning switches from stabilizing to destabilizing. Top strikes by gamma notional show where the largest hedging flows concentrate.

AMGN Dealer Greek Exposure — DEX, VEX, CHEX

Beyond gamma, dealer positioning includes delta exposure (DEX), vanna exposure (VEX), and charm exposure (CHEX). DEX measures directional risk from dealer hedging. VEX captures how dealer delta shifts when volatility changes — a large VEX means volatility moves trigger significant hedging flows. CHEX shows how time decay alters dealer delta, creating predictable end-of-day and end-of-week flows. Together these greek exposures reveal the full picture of how institutional hedging drives AMGN price action.

AMGN Volatility Surface & Skew

The AMGN volatility surface maps implied volatility across strike price (moneyness) and time to expiration using SVI (Stochastic Volatility Inspired) calibration. Hot spots indicate where the market prices the most uncertainty. The 25-delta skew measures how much more expensive out-of-the-money puts are compared to equidistant calls — steep skew means heavy demand for downside protection. The IV edge map shows where individual options deviate from the SVI model's fair value, highlighting relative value opportunities for traders.

AMGN Options Flow & Sentiment

AMGN options flow tracks put/call ratio, total call and put volume, open interest, and net premium direction. A falling put/call ratio with rising call volume signals bullish sentiment. Elevated put volume and rising open interest on puts may indicate institutional hedging or bearish bets. Net premium flow shows whether money is flowing into calls or puts on balance.

AMGN 0DTE Gamma Exposure

Zero days-to-expiration (0DTE) gamma measures the gamma exposure from options expiring today. 0DTE options have become a dominant force in intraday market structure. When 0DTE gamma is large relative to total GEX, expect amplified intraday moves as dealers hedge rapidly decaying positions. The OI-weighted average DTE reveals whether overall positioning is concentrated in short-dated or long-dated options.

AMGN Volatility Skew by Expiry

The AMGN skew profile shows how implied volatility varies across delta (from 10-delta puts to 10-delta calls) for each expiration. Steep put skew means the market is paying a premium for downside protection — common before earnings or macro events. A flat or inverted skew may signal squeeze risk or speculative call buying. Comparing skew across expirations reveals where event risk is priced.

AMGN Theta Decay by DTE

AMGN theta decay shows the aggregate time-decay exposure by DTE bucket. Near-term options (0-7 DTE) experience the steepest theta burn — this is where premium sellers capture the most decay. For AMGN, the theta-by-DTE breakdown helps income traders identify which expiration windows offer the highest decay rates relative to gamma risk.

AMGN Bid-Ask Spread & Liquidity

AMGN options liquidity profile compares ATM bid-ask spreads to wing (OTM) spreads. Tighter spreads at ATM strikes mean better execution for traders. Wide wing spreads indicate thin liquidity on out-of-the-money options — important for spread traders and tail-risk hedgers. Active contract counts show market depth.

VIX Term Structure

The VIX term structure maps volatility expectations across time — VIX9D (9-day), VIX (30-day), VIX3M (3-month), and VIX6M (6-month). Contango (upward-sloping) is the normal state, where longer-dated vol exceeds near-term. Backwardation (inverted) signals acute market stress. The VIX futures basis shows the premium or discount of 3-month vol expectations versus spot VIX — positive basis means vol sellers collect roll yield.

AMGN Market Context

Broader market context for AMGN options: VIX level (overall market fear gauge), Fed Funds rate (monetary policy), and 10-year Treasury yield (risk-free rate benchmark). These macro factors affect options pricing across the board — rising rates increase the cost of carry, while VIX spikes correlate with wider spreads and higher IV across names.

AMGN Options Key Levels Summary

LevelPriceSignificance
Call Wall$370Maximum call gamma — acts as resistance
Put Wall$360Maximum put gamma — acts as support
Gamma Flip$372Regime boundary — above = dampened, below = amplified

AMGN Options API Access

All AMGN options analytics data is available via the FlashAlpha Lab API. Endpoints:

Free tier: 50 requests/day. See pricing for higher limits. Try the interactive API playground.

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Options Market Closed — options data (IV, GEX, greeks, flow) may be cached. Stock prices may still update. Options data refreshes when the market reopens.
ATM IV
37.6%
HV20: 23.8%
VRP
+13.8
Gamma Regime
negative_gamma
VIX
Updated
Mar 17, 2026 12:39 AM ET
Bid / Ask
Expected Move
Max Pain
P/C Ratio (OI)

Data not yet available for

Price Chart

Volatility Term Structure

Skew & smile →

IV by Tenor

GET /v1/stock/amgn/summary Try it | Docs

Dealer Greek Exposure

Full GEX analysis
How we calculate
Dealer exposure is computed from end-of-day options open interest and greeks across all listed strikes and expirations. We assume market makers hold the opposite side of public order flow. GEX, DEX, VEX, and CHEX are aggregated using the Black-Scholes model with dividend-adjusted forwards. Data updates after market close (~8:30 PM ET) based on OCC-reported OI.

Top Strikes by Gamma

GET /v1/exposure/gex/amgn Try it | Docs

AMGN 0DTE Gamma Exposure

Zero days-to-expiration gamma, top strikes by gamma notional, and dealer hedging flow estimates.

0DTE Net Gamma
OI-Weighted Avg DTE
Dealer Hedging Est.

AMGN Top Gamma Strikes

Options Flow

How we calculate
Options flow aggregates open interest and volume across all listed strikes and expirations from OCC-reported data. Put/call ratios are computed from total contract counts. Active expirations count distinct expiry dates with meaningful OI. Updated after market close based on end-of-day OI reports.

Open Interest

Calls
Puts
P/C Ratio (OI)

Volume Today

Call Volume
Put Volume
P/C Ratio (Vol)
GET /v1/stock/amgn/summary includes options flow data Try it

Max Pain

Logged in
What is Max Pain?
Max Pain is the strike price where option holders (both puts and calls) would experience the maximum financial loss at expiration. It's the price at which option writers (sellers) would have to pay out the least. Many traders believe the underlying tends to gravitate toward this level near expiration as dealers hedge their positions.

AMGN OI Concentration & Positioning

How concentrated open interest is across strikes — high concentration means a few key levels dominate hedging flows.

Volatility Surface

Full vol surface
How we calculate
The volatility surface is calibrated using the SVI (Stochastic Volatility Inspired) parameterisation fitted to mid-market option prices across all listed strikes and expirations. The 50×50 grid interpolates across log-moneyness and time-to-maturity. Skew metrics use 25-delta put and call IVs from the nearest monthly expiry. Updated after market close.
Full 3D surface tool →
GET /v1/surface/amgn Try it | Docs public endpoint, no auth required

Put/Call Ratio

Logged in
How to read this
The put/call ratio compares put option activity to call option activity. A ratio above 1.0 means more puts than calls (bearish sentiment). Below 0.7 is typically considered bullish. The ratio by expiration shows where directional bets are concentrated, while the moneyness breakdown reveals whether traders are buying protection (OTM puts) or speculating on upside (OTM calls).

Aggregate Ratios

P/C Ratio (Open Interest)
P/C Ratio (Volume)

By Expiration

OI by Moneyness

IV Edge Map

Growth
What is this?
The edge map shows the difference between SVI-fitted implied volatility and the ATM term structure IV at each strike/expiration point. Positive values (red) indicate options that are expensive relative to ATM — potential sell opportunities. Negative values (blue) indicate cheap options — potential buy opportunities. The larger the deviation, the stronger the signal.

Where the SVI-calibrated surface diverges from ATM term structure IV, options are potentially mispriced. Blue cells are cheap relative to ATM (buy edge). Red cells are rich (sell edge). The bigger the divergence, the stronger the signal.

Market Context

CBOE VIX
S&P 500
Fear & Greed
VVIX
Vol of Vol
SKEW Index
Tail Risk
MOVE Index
Bond Vol

AMGN Volatility Skew by Expiry

How implied volatility varies across delta (10ΔP to 10ΔC) for each expiration. Steep put skew = expensive downside protection. Flat skew = balanced sentiment.

AMGN Theta Decay by DTE

Net theta exposure aggregated by days-to-expiration bucket. Shows where time decay is concentrated — critical for premium sellers and income strategies.

AMGN Bid-Ask Spread & Liquidity

Options market liquidity profile — ATM vs wing spreads and contract depth. Tighter spreads = better execution for traders.

VIX Term Structure

VIX index family across tenors — contango (rising curve) is normal; backwardation (inverted) signals near-term stress. The VIX futures basis shows the premium/discount of longer-dated vol expectations vs spot VIX.

Understanding AMGN Options Analytics

Key concepts behind the data on this page — learn how to read dealer positioning, volatility, and options flow.

What is Gamma Exposure (GEX)?

Gamma Exposure (GEX) measures the total gamma held by options market makers across all strikes and expirations for . When dealers are long gamma (positive GEX), they buy dips and sell rips — dampening volatility. When they are short gamma (negative GEX), they amplify moves in both directions. The gamma flip level marks where dealer positioning shifts from stabilising to destabilising.

What is Volatility Risk Premium (VRP)?

The Volatility Risk Premium is the difference between 's implied volatility (what options price in) and realised volatility (what actually happens). A positive VRP means options are expensive relative to actual moves — favorable for premium sellers. A negative VRP means the stock is moving more than options predict — vol is underpriced.

What is Implied Volatility (IV)?

Implied Volatility is the market's forecast of how much will move, expressed as an annualised percentage. ATM IV (at-the-money) reflects consensus expectations. The IV term structure shows how expectations change across time — contango (rising) is normal, while backwardation (inverted) often signals a near-term event like earnings.

What is Options Skew?

Options skew measures how much more expensive out-of-the-money puts are compared to equidistant calls for . The 25-delta skew shown above compares 25Δ put IV to 25Δ call IV. Steep skew means the market is paying up for downside protection. Inverted skew (calls richer than puts) can signal squeeze positioning or strong bullish sentiment.

What are DEX, VEX, and CHEX?

DEX (Delta Exposure) measures directional risk — how many shares dealers must trade when the stock moves. VEX (Vanna Exposure) captures how dealer delta changes when volatility shifts. CHEX (Charm Exposure) shows how dealer delta evolves as time passes. Together, they reveal the full picture of dealer hedging flow for .

What is a Volatility Surface?

The volatility surface maps implied volatility across two dimensions: strike price (moneyness) and time to expiration. The heatmap above shows 's IV at selected strikes and expirations. Hot spots indicate where the market prices the most uncertainty. Traders use the surface to identify relative value — finding cheap or expensive options compared to the surrounding IV landscape.

Get more from AMGN

Real-time analytics, full strike-level exposure, vol surface, and historical data.

Build with our API — integrate AMGN data into your own tools
GET /v1/stock//summary
Core
Returns: price, volatility (IV, HV, VRP, term structure, skew), exposure (GEX, DEX, VEX, CHEX, key levels), options flow, macro context
GET /v1/exposure/gex/
Exposure
Returns: per-strike gamma exposure (call GEX, put GEX, net GEX) for all strikes with OI ≥ threshold
GET /v1/surface/
Advanced
Returns: SVI-calibrated implied volatility surface — 50×50 grid (tenors × moneyness), spot price, forward prices

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