Options Are the Hottest Trade on Wall Street

Crypto may have grabbed headlines last year, but the talk on Wall Street these days is all about options.

Retail investors are flocking to options, which give the holder the right to buy or sell a security, as a relatively cheap way to bet on stocks. Institutional investors are taking advantage too, as options offer a less expensive way to limit losses in times of volatile markets.

But the pandemic’s day-trading-frenzy morphed derivatives from the realm of professional traders only into tools for sophisticated retail investors, with global options trading setting record after record and overtaking futures volumes in 2021.

Take the case of IUR Capital, an equity, derivatives and advisory firm based in London. Its assets more than tripled since early January to $100 million, with one of its biggest clients shifting exposure over from crypto.

“We’ve seen speculative money move out of crypto and into options, given all the risk around the former,” IUR managing director Gareth Ryan said by phone. “Options are not seen as being outright speculative anymore.”

options trade wall street

Trading in options surged 478% in the past decade, dwarfing the 142% growth in futures, according to data compiled by the Futures Industry Association, an industry group. But the number of deals really started heating up after 2019, when Charles Schwab Corp. waived commissions for trading in stocks, exchange-traded funds and options.