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I've been digging into why gamma squeezes have become such a hot topic in crypto and traditional markets lately, and honestly, the mechanics are wild. Most people have no clue what's actually driving these insane rallies until it's too late.
So here's the deal with a gamma squeeze. It starts simple enough—traders start buying a ton of call options, betting on a price move higher. But here's where it gets interesting: market makers who sell these options need to hedge their risk by buying the actual underlying asset. The more calls get sold, the more shares they need to grab. It's like a chain reaction nobody expects.
Let me break down the options side first since that's crucial to understanding this. When you buy a call option, you're getting the right to purchase an asset at a set price before expiration. Market makers are the ones constantly quoting prices to keep these markets liquid. They profit off the bid-ask spread, but they're also exposed—if the stock rallies hard, they're on the hook.
This is where delta and gamma come in. Delta tells you how much an option price moves with every dollar the stock moves. Gamma is the rate of change in delta itself. Think of delta as your speedometer and gamma as your acceleration. When gamma squeezes happen, that acceleration becomes absolutely brutal.
The GameStop situation in late 2020 was the perfect storm. Reddit's r/WallStreetBets community had orchestrated this coordinated push into call options, especially cheap out-of-the-money calls and 0DTE options (expiring same day). Market makers were forced to buy more and more GME shares to hedge. But here's the feedback loop that creates a gamma squeeze: stock rises → delta increases → market makers buy even more shares → stock rises further. It's self-reinforcing until it's not.
What made GameStop even crazier was the short squeeze happening simultaneously. Retail investors were flush with stimulus checks, Robinhood had just launched commission-free trading, and social media figures like Keith Gill (Roaring Kitty) could move the stock 20% with a single post. It was a perfect moment for a gamma squeeze to explode.
Here's my take though: don't try to ride these. A gamma squeeze is exciting to watch but absolutely brutal to trade. The volatility is insane, overnight gaps are common, and you're not really in control—the market makers, social media, and regulatory decisions are. AMC had a similar blow-up, and latecomers got destroyed. These moves aren't based on fundamentals; they're pure momentum and market mechanics.
The real lesson? Understanding how a gamma squeeze works is valuable for risk management and spotting when markets are getting dangerously disconnected from reality. But participating in one? That's a different beast entirely. Most traders are better off watching from the sidelines.