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Option chain & Greeks

Reading bids, asks, and live delta, gamma, theta, vega and IV.

The option chain lists every available strike for the session with its calls and puts. It's where you read the market and click to build orders.

Reading the chain

Each row is a strike; calls sit on one side, puts on the other. For each option you'll see:

  • Bid — the best price a buyer is offering (what you'd receive selling).
  • Ask — the best price a seller is asking (what you'd pay buying).
  • Mid — the midpoint of bid and ask; the simulator's reference fill price for market orders.
  • Delta (below).

The strike nearest the current SPX price is the at-the-money strike and is highlighted. Strikes are listed on a fixed grid (commonly every 5 points for SPX).

Delta

Delta measures how an option's price responds to a $1 move in the underlying. Every option in the chain — and every open position — carries a live delta that recomputes whenever the clock moves.

Greek Measures Convention used here
Delta Sensitivity to a $1 move in the underlying Decimal 0..1, unsigned in the chain. Multiply by 100 for the familiar "30-delta" shorthand.

In the chain, delta is shown unsigned. On a position, delta takes a sign from your direction: long calls have positive delta, short calls negative (and the reverse for puts). See Positions & P&L.

Imputed quotes

When a real bid/ask isn't available for an exact moment, the simulator synthesizes a quote so the chain stays continuous across every second of the session even when the live market was momentarily thin.

Mid-price rules

The mid-price is the midpoint of bid and ask, rounded to the instrument's tick:

  • SPX options round to the nearest nickel ($0.05).
  • Other options round to the nearest penny ($0.01).

Edge case: when the bid-ask spread is exactly one tick wide, the simulator uses the ask for buys and the bid for sells. These rules determine the fill price of market orders — see Orders & order types.

Building orders from the chain

Click any call or put cell to add it as a leg on your order ticket. Add several legs to build a spread, an iron condor, or any multi-leg structure; they'll execute together as a single atomic order. The ticket previews the net price, fees, and buying-power impact before you submit.