NFLX Options Signal $95–$110 Battle: How to Play the Warner Bros Bid's Volatility
- NFLX down 1.37% at $102.54, trading below 200-day MA for 10 days straight
- Put/call open interest ratio at 1.16, with 8,685 puts at $95 and 14,768 calls at $110
- Warner Bros bid sparks regulatory fears, stock closed below key technical levels
Put open interest at $95–$97.5 strikes dominates this Friday’s expirations, with 8,685 puts at $95—the most watched level. This suggests institutional players are bracing for a breakdown below $100, especially with RSI at 1.06 (extreme oversold territory). Yet call activity isn’t dead: 14,768 calls at $110 (this Friday’s top OTM strike) and 8,305 at $125 show some bullish conviction. The split? Traders are hedging a Warner BrosWBD-- deal fallout but leaving room for a rebound if regulatory fears ease.
The $95–$110 corridor is the battleground. If NFLXNFLX-- breaks below $97.5, the put-heavy OI could accelerate selling. But a rally above $105 might trigger call buyers to capitalize on a short-covering bounce. No block trades to skew the odds—this is pure retail and institutional sentiment clashing.Warner Bros Drama: Fuel for the Bear or a False Flag?Netflix’s $70B bid for WBD assets has investors spooked. The 5.4% drop last week wasn’t just about debt—it was about execution risk. Merging 400M subscribers? Bundling pricing models? Regulatory roadblocks? These aren’t just headlines; they’re real operational nightmares.
Yet the market’s pricing in a worst-case scenario. Analysts peg fair value at $134.65, implying 30% upside if the deal closes smoothly. But until then, the stock’s technicals (MACD at -272.8, Bollinger Bands squeezing) suggest more pain. The 200-day MA at $107.62 is a psychological wall—break that, and the bear case gets reinforced.
Actionable Trades: Put Protection and Call ContingencyFor options traders:- Bearish play: Buy NFLX20251205P97.5NFLX20251205P97.5-- (next Friday’s $97.5 puts) at $3.25. Target $95 if the stock gaps down pre-earnings.
- Bullish hedge: NFLX20251212C110NFLX20251212C110-- (next Friday’s $110 calls) at $1.80. Use this if the stock rebounds on short-covering or regulatory optimism.
- Short entry: Consider selling NFLX near $101.77 (today’s low) with a stop above $103.96 (30D resistance). Target $95–$97.5 if the Warner Bros narrative worsens.
- Long entry: Buy NFLX at $100.50 (just below 200-day MA) with a tight stop at $98.50. This works only if the stock holds key support and news turns positive.
The next 45 days will test NFLX’s mettle. If the WBD deal survives regulatory scrutiny, the stock could rally on bundled pricing optimism. But a single misstep—antitrust lawsuits, integration delays, subscriber churn—could send it tumbling toward $90s.
Your edge? The options market already prices in 1.16x more bearish bets than bullish. That’s your guide: protect downside with puts at $95–$97.5, and keep a small position in calls at $110 to capitalize on a surprise rebound. This isn’t a long-term trade—it’s a volatility play. And in Hollywood, surprises are the norm.
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