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Just been diving deeper into why 0DTE options have become such a thing in the trading community lately, and honestly it's pretty interesting how this market has evolved.
So for those not familiar, 0DTE options are contracts that expire the same day you trade them. Basically you're betting on intraday price moves with no overnight risk. The whole appeal is the potential for quick profits if you read the market right that day.
What's wild is how accessible this has become. Back in 2005 the CBOE started offering weekly options, but the real game-changer was 2022 when they rolled out 0DTE options on the SPX for every single trading day. Before that, most stocks only had them once a week or once a month. Now traders have daily opportunities to play these contracts, and the volume has absolutely exploded. According to Goldman Sachs, almost half of all SPX trading volume is now 0DTE trades. That's insane.
The SPX is definitely the most popular because of the liquidity. You get tight bid-ask spreads and can actually move in and out of positions without getting destroyed on fills. Most individual stocks don't have anywhere near that kind of volume, so you end up with worse execution.
One thing to watch though - if you're opening and closing a 0DTE option the same day, it counts as a day trade. So you need that $25k minimum in your account to avoid PDT rule issues. If you just let it expire without closing early, you're fine. But if your account can't handle day trading, these are risky because you can't quickly exit if things go sideways.
Why are traders so into them? First, the profit potential is legit if you can predict short-term price action. You don't have to hold overnight, so you avoid gap risk. Second, the liquidity is there - you can get in and out easily at reasonable prices. Third, they're flexible. Since they're available daily, you can react to news, adjust positions based on what's happening in real time.
Most people either scalp them for quick wins or sell them to collect premium. Selling is actually more popular because any 0DTE option that ends out-of-the-money is worthless at expiration. So betting on that happening gives you a pretty high win rate. But yeah, the market can whip around during the day, so even if your option expires worthless, you might see some gnarly unrealized losses along the way.
The go-to strategies are the iron condor and iron butterfly. Iron condor is where you sell both a put spread and call spread at the same time, betting the underlying stays in a range. Iron butterfly is similar but you're selling at-the-money options and buying further out-of-the-money protection. Both strategies have defined max loss and profit, which is nice for risk management. The catch is they need active management - if the market moves hard, you need to adjust or you could blow up.
Bottom line, 0DTE options give you a way to profit from daily volatility if you know what you're doing. The liquidity is solid, the opportunities are there every trading day, and experienced traders have definitely found ways to make money with them. Just need to respect the risk and have the account size to manage positions properly.