Shares of $Marvell Technology(MRVL)$ closed at $198.70, down 4.59% on the session. The company’s options market has recently seen a wave of unusually large block trades with substantial notional value, underscoring sharp divergence among institutional investors over the stock’s future direction and volatility outlook. Positioning across the options tape reflects a mix of aggressive upside bets and defensive hedging activity.
Options Metrics Signal Elevated Volatility
Implied volatility (IV) on Marvell options currently stands at 99.30%, while the IV percentile has climbed to 96.81%, indicating that implied volatility is trading near historically extreme levels. In practical terms, options premiums are exceptionally expensive relative to historical norms.
For options buyers, elevated IV translates into higher entry costs, while for premium sellers it creates opportunities to collect richer option income.
Meanwhile, the call-to-put volume ratio stands at 1.15, suggesting relatively balanced activity between bullish and bearish contracts, with neither side showing overwhelming dominance in overall trading volume.
Block Trades Highlight Split Positioning
Over the past three trading sessions, all notable block trades have been executed as single-leg structures rather than complex multi-leg spreads.
Broadly, activity has been dominated by call buying and sales of out-of-the-money put options, pointing to an underlying bullish bias in market positioning. However, one standout transaction — a long-dated put purchase worth more than $8 million — suggests some institutional investors are simultaneously building substantial downside protection against potential long-term risks.
The largest trades by notional value include:
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Purchase of June 2027 $200 puts:
Traders bought 1,500 contracts for roughly $8.17 million. The long-dated structure — extending more than three years out — represents either a significant downside hedge or a bearish volatility-driven position. While the strike sits only modestly below the current share price, the long maturity dramatically increases premium value and provides extended protection against a potential long-term decline.
Source: Tiger Trade App
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Purchase of June 2026 $180 calls:
Investors bought 2,336 in-the-money call contracts worth approximately $7.77 million. Deep in-the-money call buying is typically viewed as a strong bullish signal due to the contracts’ high delta and close correlation with underlying stock performance, suggesting expectations that shares will remain firmly above the $180 level.
Source: Tiger Trade App
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Purchase of June 2026 $250 calls:
Traders acquired 3,985 out-of-the-money call contracts valued at around $3.54 million. The trade represents a high-conviction directional bet on substantial upside potential, targeting a move above $250 over the coming year.
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Sale of November 2026 $130 puts:
Roughly 2,000 contracts were sold for about $2.07 million. Selling deep out-of-the-money puts is a classic bullish income-generating strategy, reflecting expectations that the stock is unlikely to fall toward the $130 strike over the medium term.
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Sale of January 2027 $110 puts:
Another 1,400 deep out-of-the-money put contracts were sold for approximately $1.09 million. The positioning similarly reflects confidence in the stock’s longer-term outlook and a view that the probability of an extreme downside scenario remains low.
Source: Tiger Trade App
In addition, the options tape showed several smaller trades involving sales of near-dated, ultra-deep out-of-the-money puts, likely aimed at harvesting rapid time decay rather than expressing strong directional conviction.
Positioning Reflects Bullish Bias With Defensive Overlay
Taken together, the block-trade distribution points to a broader strategy framework centered on constructive equity exposure paired with volatility hedging at both ends of the distribution.
The bullish component is expressed through purchases of both in-the-money and out-of-the-money calls, as well as systematic sales of deep out-of-the-money puts. At the same time, the large-scale purchase of long-dated puts suggests investors are unwilling to ignore tail-risk protection amid elevated volatility conditions.
Notably, all sold put contracts were positioned out of the money, consistent with relatively conservative premium-selling strategies.
Overall market positioning can be characterized as cautiously bullish, but with a meaningful defensive overlay against longer-term downside risks.
Strategy Watch
For investors looking to participate in premium-selling strategies, recent institutional positioning may offer a useful framework. One approach could involve selling longer-dated, deep out-of-the-money puts — such as strikes below the $130 level — to collect time premium.
For traders seeking to limit margin exposure or cap downside risk, bear put spreads or defined-risk put credit spreads may provide a more balanced alternative by pairing short puts with lower-strike long puts to contain maximum potential losses.
$(MRVL)$ $GraniteShares 2X Long MRVL Daily ETF(MVLL)$ $Direxion Daily MRVL Bull 2X ETF(MRVU)$
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