ServiceNow Stock May Be Setting Up a Hidden Options Opportunity


On the surface, cloud computing platform specialist ServiceNow (NOW) appears disastrous. Once one of the bright names in tech, NOW stock has given up almost 21% of value over the past 52 weeks. Since the start of this year, the security has fallen nearly 19%. Not surprisingly, the Barchart Technical Opinion indicator rates shares as an 80% Strong Sell.

Looking at the Top Trade Alerts, the last signal flashed around mid-November, which of course was a Sell. And because this alert is based off moving average crossovers, it may take a while for NOW stock to see a Buy rating. However, for the most aggressive speculator, there’s a chance to extract some profits prior to the rest of the market catching on.

Basically, the hypothesis is as follows: for NOW stock to generate a technical Buy signal, you would probably have to wait for the security to breach $140. That’s about a 13% gap from the current spot price, which is a sizable jump when you factor in the leverage of options.

What’s more, the smart money seems to be finally believing in ServiceNow stock. In particular, options flow — a screener that focuses exclusively on big block transactions likely placed by institutional investors — revealed net trade sentiment of $7.07 million on last Friday’s session. Total gross bullish volume reached nearly $13.1 million, reflecting potentially rising optimism.

However, the real intrigue comes from microstructure analytics, specifically volatility skew and gamma exposure.

Let’s begin with volatility skew, which by definition is a screener that identifies implied volatility (IV) — or a stock’s potential range of motion — across the entire price spectrum of a given options chain. Basically, the skew showcases the surface-area distortion of volatility space, allowing retail traders to better understand how the smart money is positioning its risk profile.

If we frame the skew as a security protocol, the spikes in curvature reflect the potential vulnerability points where sophisticated market participants seek coverage; that is, they’re willing to pay an extra premium to avoid being directionally caught out.



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *