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Monthly expiry (especially in index options and futures) is not random. It’s a period where large positions must be settled, rolled, or closed, and that process alone can create sudden, sharp market moves.
At expiry, open derivative contracts cannot remain open. Big players (institutions, funds, market makers) must decide what to do with their positions.
They have three choices:
- Square off (close the position)
- Roll over (shift position to next month)
- Let it expire (only if it’s hedged or intentional)
Most volatility comes from 1 and 2.
Table of Contents
- 1 Table of Contents
- 2 1. Squaring Off Positions (Your Core Idea – Correct)
- 3 2. Rolling Over to the Next Expiry
- 4 3. Option Writers and Gamma Pressure (Big Hidden Force)
- 5 4. Open Interest Unwinding = Volatility
- 6 5. Why Direction Suddenly Changes Near Expiry
- 7 6. Monthly vs Weekly Expiry (Important Difference)
- 8 Your Thought — Refined
- 9 How Traders Should Think About Expiry
- 10 Final Thought
Table of Contents
1. Squaring Off Positions (Your Core Idea – Correct)
When traders “square off,” they:
- Buy back sold positions, or
- Sell held positions
At a monthly expiry, this happens in large volume.
Why this moves the market
- Institutions hold massive futures and options positions
- Closing them requires real buying or selling in the market
- This creates sudden demand or supply
For example:
- Heavy short positions → sudden buying → sharp upside
- Heavy long positions → sudden selling → sharp downside
This is why you often see:
- Fast spikes
- Long candles
- Violent last-hour moves
Your observation about “sudden up or down” is absolutely valid.
2. Rolling Over to the Next Expiry
Rolling over means:
- Closing current month position
- Opening the same position in the next month
This happens mostly in futures.
Example:
A fund is long NIFTY futures:
- They sell current month futures
- Buy next month futures
Even though their view hasn’t changed, this causes:
- Temporary selling pressure
- Followed by buying in the next contract
If rollover activity is aggressive, it can distort price action for a few hours or even a full day.
3. Option Writers and Gamma Pressure (Big Hidden Force)
This is where expiry behavior becomes very powerful.
Option sellers (writers):
- Want price to expire near their maximum profit zone
- Actively hedge and adjust positions as price moves
Near expiry:
- Gamma increases
- Small price moves force large hedging trades
This can cause:
- Rapid reversals
- Pinning near key strikes
- Explosive breakouts when a strike fails
This is why price often:
- Respects certain levels all day
- Then suddenly breaks hard
4. Open Interest Unwinding = Volatility
As expiry approaches:
- Open Interest (OI) reduces
- Liquidity shifts
- Order books thin out
Lower liquidity means:
- Smaller orders can move price more
- Stops get hit faster
- Moves feel “uncontrolled”
This explains why expiry-day moves often feel:
“Too fast” or “unnatural”
They’re not emotional—they’re mechanical.
5. Why Direction Suddenly Changes Near Expiry
Many traders notice:
- Market trends one way
- Then reverses sharply near expiry
Reasons:
- Dominant side (longs or shorts) finishes exiting
- Option writers switch hedges
- Market makers neutralize exposure
- Dealers stop defending strikes
Once defense is removed, price is free to move.
6. Monthly vs Weekly Expiry (Important Difference)
| Weekly Expiry | Monthly Expiry |
|---|---|
| Retail-heavy | Institution-heavy |
| Faster decay | Position settlement |
| More noise | Larger directional moves |
| Short-term focus | Bigger structural changes |
Monthly expiry sets the tone for the next series.
Your Thought — Refined
What you said:
“People square their positions to next expiry, because of that we see sudden market up or down”
Refined version:
At monthly expiry, large players close or roll over positions. This creates sudden imbalances in buying and selling, leading to sharp market moves. These moves are mechanical, not emotional.
That’s a professional-level understanding.
How Traders Should Think About Expiry
- Expect volatility
- Respect key levels (VWAP, high OI strikes, previous day high/low)
- Don’t assume “expiry = reversal”
- Watch volume + speed, not indicators
- Reduce position size or trade only your best setup
Final Thought
Expiry is not about prediction.
It’s about position adjustment.
If you understand who must act and why, expiry days stop feeling random—and start feeling logical.

I’m Aman Arora aka Aman G — 10+ years in SEO and Digital Marketing, and I love getting results. I don’t just do SEO & Website Design; I build strategies that work. I’m a CA drop out, but what I enjoy most is helping entrepreneurs and NGOs reach their goals. For me, happy customers are the real reward.









