Open interest

Open interest

Open interest (also known as open contracts or open commitments) refers to the total number of derivative contracts, like futures and options, that have not been settled in the immediately previous time period for a specific underlying security. A large open interest indicates more activity and liquidity for the contract.[1]

For each buyer of a futures contract there must be a seller. From the time the buyer or seller opens the contract until the counter-party closes it, that contract is considered 'open'.

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Use of Open Interest in Technical Analysis

Many technical analysts believe that a knowledge of open interest can prove useful toward the end of major market moves. For some option traders, open interest indicates the intensity of trading in a financial instrument. If open interest increases suddenly, it is likely that new information about the underlying security has been revealed, which may indicate a near-term rise in the underlying security's volatility. However, neither an increase in volatility nor open interest necessarily indicate anything about the direction of future price movements. A leveling off of open interest following a sustained price advance is often an early warning of the end to an uptrending or bull market.

Technical analysts view increasing open interest as an indication that new money is flowing into the marketplace. From this assumption, one could conclude that the present trend will continue. Analogously, declining open interest implies that the market is liquidating, and suggests that the prevailing price trend is coming to an end. A common misconception is that open interest is the same thing as no of option contracts traded. The difference between the two can be explained with a short scenario here;

Trade Open Interest No. of Contracts Traded
Day 1 A sells 10 contracts which are bought by B 10 10
Day 2 C sells 5 contracts which are bought by D 15 5
Day 3 B exits his position of 10 contracts which are bought by E 15 10
Day 4 D exits his position of 5 contracts which are bought by A to partially close his position 10 5
Day 5 E sells his 10 contracts bought by A and C, 5 each to fully close their position 0 10

[2]

Further, according to the definition of open interest in this entry, a change in open interest indicates a difference in the number of buyers and sellers of a financial instrument. Like volatility, it has no directional component, it is just a tally of unsettled contracts.

For example, if trader X buys 2 futures contracts from trader Y(who is the seller), then open interest rises by 2.

If another trader A buys 2 futures contracts from trader B, then the open interest rises to 4. Now, if trader X unwinds his position and the counter party is either Y or B, then the open interest in the system will reduce by that quantity.

But if X unwinds his position, and the counter party is a new entrant, say C, then the open interest will remain unchanged. This is because while X has squared off his position, Y’s position is still open. The level of outstanding positions in the derivatives segment is one of the parameters widely tracked by the market.

The Importance of Open Interest

Open interest is a concept that all option traders need to understand. Although it is always one of the data fields on most option quote displays—along with bid price, ask price, volume, and implied volatility—many traders ignore open interest. But while it may be less important than the option's price, or even current volume, open interest provide useful information that should be considered when entering an option position.

First, let's look at exactly what open interest represents. Unlike stock trading, in which there is a fixed number of shares to be traded, option trading can involve the creation of a new option contract when a trade is placed. Open interest will tell you the total number of option contracts that are currently open—in other words, contracts that have been traded but not yet liquidated by either an offsetting trade or an exercise or assignment.

For example, say we look at Microsoft and open interest tells us that there have been 81,700 options opened for the March 27.5 call option. You may be wondering if that number refers to options bought or sold. The answer is that you have no way to know for sure how many transactions have taken place but you do know that there are 81,700 options contracts that remain open. Since there is 1 bought position and 1 sold position for each of these contracts, there are 81,700 positions that remain bought to 'open' and 81,700 positions that remain sold to 'open' for the March 27.5 call option. There are always the same number of positions on either side of the open transactions.

So, when an option is traded with one party opening and one party closing, the open interest remains unchanged. If both parties in the transaction are closing positions then the open interest decreases accordingly. If both parties are opening positions then the open interest goes up accordingly.

One way to use open interest is to look at it relative to the volume of contracts traded. When the volume exceeds the existing open interest on a given day, this suggests that trading in that option was exceptionally high that day. Open interest can help you determine whether there is unusually high or low volume for any particular option.

Open interest also gives you key information regarding the liquidity of an option. If there is no open interest for an option, there is no secondary market for that option. When options have large open interest, it means they have a large number of buyers and sellers, and an active secondary market will increase the odds of getting option orders filled at good prices. So, all other things being equal, the bigger the open interest, the easier it will be to trade that option at a reasonable spread between the bid and ask.[3]

Benefits of Monitoring Open Interest

By monitoring the changes in the open interest figures at the end of each trading day, some conclusions about the day’s activity can be drawn.

Increasing open interest means that new money is flowing into the marketplace. The result will be that the present trend (up, down or sideways) will continue.

Declining open interest means that the market is liquidating and implies that the prevailing price trend is coming to an end. A knowledge of open interest can prove useful toward the end of major market moves.

A leveling off of open interest following a sustained price advance is often an early warning of the end to an uptrending or bull market.

Open Interest - A Confirming Indicator

An increase in open interest along with an increase in price is said to confirm an upward trend. Similarly, an increase in open interest along with a decrease in price confirms a downward trend. An increase or decrease in prices while open interest remains flat or declining may indicate a possible trend reversal.

The relationship between the prevailing price trend and open interest can be summarized by the following table:[4][5]

Price Open Interest Interpretation
Rising Rising Market is Strong
Rising Falling Market is Weakening
Falling Rising Market is Weak
Falling Falling Market is Strengthening

References

External links


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Open interest — bezeichnet die Summe aller offenen Positionen in einem Termin oder Optionskontrakt. Open interest steigt bei jeder Börsentransaktion, welche sowohl beim Käufer als auch beim Verkäufer eine neue offene Position erzeugt, um eins (A kauft erstmals… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • open interest — The total number of futures or options contracts of a given commodity that have not yet been offset by an opposite futures or option transaction nor fulfilled by delivery of the commodity or option exercise. Each open transaction has a buyer and… …   Financial and business terms

  • Open interest — The total number of derivative contracts traded that not yet been liquidated either by an offsetting derivative transaction or by delivery. Related: liquidation * * * open interest ˌopen ˈinterest noun [uncountable] FINANCE in futures (= buying a …   Financial and business terms

  • Open Interest — 1. The total number of options and/or futures contracts that are not closed or delivered on a particular day. 2. The number of buy market orders before the stock market opens. 1. A common misconception is that open interest is the same thing as… …   Investment dictionary

  • open interest —  The number of outstanding futures contracts.  ► “Trading volume and open interest in options and futures contracts on stock indices, equities, and interest rate instruments traded on world exchanges have experienced remarkable growth.” (New… …   American business jargon

  • OPEN INTEREST — Фьючерсные контракты, которые еще не оплачены. Open interest равен общему числу длинных или коротких позиций, но не их комбинации …   Малая энциклопедия трейдера: глоссарий к книге

  • open interest —   Numero totale di contratti futures, aventi come sottostante un determinato titolo o una determinato bene, attualmente in essere. Ciò significa che nel calcolo dell open interest non si tiene conto dei contratti già liquidati o di quelli chiusi… …   Glossario di economia e finanza

  • Open interest (futures) — Open interest is the number of open contracts of derivatives like futures and options that have a time limit after which they expire. Open interest in a derivative is the sum of all contracts that have not expired, been exercised or physically… …   Wikipedia

  • open interest — noun The number of contracts outstanding between market participants in a futures market or other derivatives market …   Wiktionary

  • open interest — noun : the total in physical units of outstanding long and short futures contracts on a commodity exchange …   Useful english dictionary

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