Put/Call Ratio: Sentiment Extremes
📊 What Everyone Thinks
Market Internals — 8/5
Market Internals — 8/5
Everyone is buying puts. The ratio spikes to 1.5. The news is terrible. Economists predict doom. Your taxi driver is talking about market crashes. The put/call ratio screams extreme fear.
This might be the most bullish signal you’ll see.
Everyone is buying calls. The ratio drops to 0.4. The market can’t lose. Your dentist is giving stock tips. Euphoria everywhere. The put/call ratio screams extreme greed.
This might be the most bearish signal you’ll see.
Welcome to the contrarian world of the put/call ratio – where extreme readings mean the opposite of what they appear to mean.
🔍 What Is Put/Call Ratio
The Simple Calculation
“`
Put Volume ÷ Call Volume = Put/Call Ratio
Example:
Put volume: 1,000,000
Call volume: 800,000
Put/Call Ratio: 1.25
“`
Above 1.0: More puts than calls traded (fear/hedging dominant)
Below 1.0: More calls than puts traded (greed/speculation dominant)
What It Measures
The put/call ratio measures option market sentiment. It tells you what options traders are doing with their money – not what they’re saying, but what they’re actually betting on.
High ratio (above 1.0):
- Investors buying protection (puts)
- Speculators betting on declines
- Fear present in options market
Low ratio (below 0.7):
- Investors speculating on rallies (calls)
- Few buying protection
- Complacency/greed present
Different Types
Total Put/Call Ratio:
- Includes all options (index + equity)
- Most widely followed
- Often elevated due to index hedging
Equity Put/Call Ratio:
- Individual stocks only
- Pure sentiment measure
- Better for extremes
Index Put/Call Ratio:
- Index options only
- Shows hedging activity
- Less useful for sentiment
📈 Reading Extremes
| P/C Level | Sentiment | What It Means | Contrarian Signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| **Below 0.60** | 🚀 Euphoria | Everyone bullish | ⚠️ Warning – top likely |
| **0.60-0.80** | 😊 Optimistic | Normal bullish | ✅ Neutral |
| **0.80-1.00** | 😐 Balanced | Mixed sentiment | ✅ Neutral |
| **1.00-1.20** | 😰 Fearful | Hedging active | 👀 Watch for opportunity |
| **Above 1.20** | 😱 Panic | Extreme fear | 🚀 Strong buy signal |
Historical Extremes
March 2009 (Market Bottom):
- P/C ratio hit 1.5+
- Extreme fear
- Market bottomed
- 10-year bull run followed
March 2000 (Market Top):
- P/C ratio hit 0.4
- Extreme greed
- Dot-com peak
- Crash followed
October 2008 (Financial Crisis):
- P/C ratio sustained above 1.0
- Persistent fear
- Multiple opportunities for brave buyers
⚡ Contrarian Strategy
Why Extremes Matter
The put/call ratio is contrarian because it measures what people are DOING, not what they SHOULD do.
When everyone buys puts:
- They’re already positioned for downside
- They’ve already sold or hedged
- No one left to drive prices lower
- The selling pressure is exhausted
When everyone buys calls:
- They’re already positioned for upside
- They’re fully invested
- No one left to drive prices higher
- The buying pressure is exhausted
The Crowd Is Wrong at Extremes
At extreme readings, the crowd has already acted. Their money is positioned. Whatever they feared or hoped for is already priced in.
High P/C (above 1.2):
- Fear is priced in
- Downside surprise unlikely
- Upside surprise possible
- Contrarian bullish
Low P/C (below 0.6):
- Greed is priced in
- Upside surprise unlikely
- Downside surprise possible
- Contrarian bearish
Combining with Price Action
Don’t trade P/C ratio alone. Wait for price confirmation:
1. P/C spikes to extreme (>1.2 or <0.6)
2. Watch for price to confirm (bottoming pattern or topping pattern)
3. Enter on confirmation, not on P/C alone
4. Stop if price invalidates the setup
💡 Practical Application
Daily Routine
Check P/C ratio from previous day:
- Above 1.2? Note extreme fear
- Below 0.6? Note extreme greed
- Between 0.8-1.0? Normal conditions
Compare to recent range:
- 20-day average provides context
- Spikes outside range are significant
- Sustained extremes more meaningful than one-day spikes
Where to Find P/C Ratio
- CBOE website: Daily updates
- Trading platforms: Most brokerages show it
- Financial news: Bloomberg, CNBC mention extremes
- Free sources: Yahoo Finance, MarketWatch
Simple Checklist
- [ ] P/C > 1.2 = Extreme fear = Potential opportunity
- [ ] P/C < 0.6 = Extreme greed = Potential warning
- [ ] P/C 0.8-1.0 = Normal = Focus on stock selection
- [ ] Sustained extreme > Single day spike
✅ Key Takeaways
- P/C ratio measures positioning: Not prediction, but where money is positioned
- Contrarian at extremes: High P/C bullish, low P/C bearish
- Wait for confirmation: Don’t trade P/C alone; wait for price action
- Equity P/C best: Individual stock sentiment clearer than index hedging
- Sustained matters more: Multi-day extremes more reliable than single spikes
- Context is everything:
You’ve mastered reading the market’s vital signs:
- Market breadth (Advance/Decline Line)
- Volatility expectations (VIX)
- Option sentiment (Put/Call Ratio)
These tools reveal what price charts cannot – the health, psychology, and positioning of the market beneath the surface.
** Continue your journey with other Foundry series
Previous: [VIX: The Fear Index](/vix-fear-index/)
Back to: [The Foundry](/foundry/)
This completes the Market Internals series from The Foundry — reading the market’s vital signs.
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