TSLA Options Show Bullish Bias at $500 Strike as Block Trades Signal Volatility Play—Here’s How to Position for 2026
- TSLA trades at $450.8, up 1.3% with volume surging to 51M shares.
- Options data reveals a 0.82 put/call open interest ratio, favoring calls at key strikes like $500 and $960.
- Block trades show a $3.1M bet on the TSLA20260116C440TSLA20260116C440-- call and a $1.4M short on the same strike’s put.
The options chain is a chessboard of conflicting bets. For this Friday’s expiry (Jan 16), the TSLA20260116C500TSLA20260116C500-- call ($500 strike) leads with 43,853 open contracts, while the TSLA20260116P250TSLA20260116P250-- put ($250 strike) dominates puts with 42,445 open contracts. This suggests a tug-of-war: bulls are hedging for a rally above $500, while bears are bracing for a drop below $250.
But here’s the twist: the largest block trade today was a $3.1M buy of TSLA20260116C440 calls (strike $440, expiry Jan 16). That’s a near-term bet TeslaTSLA-- will hold above $440—a level just 1.5% below current price. Meanwhile, a $1.4M short on the TSLA20260116P440TSLA20260116P440-- put implies sellers expect the stock to avoid a sharp drop. This isn’t a clear signal—it’s a volatility play. If you’re trading TSLATSLA--, you’re hedging both ways.
News Flow: Bearish Analysts vs. Bullish AI HopesThe headlines are all over the map. Wolfe Research and Wells Fargo are bearish, citing slowing demand and margin pressures. But Stifel and others see a $600+ future if Cybertruck and FSD take off. The stock’s 298x P/E reflects a gamble: investors are pricing in AI and robotics success, not just cars.
This duality shows up in options. The $960 call (with 51,083 open contracts) is a moonshot bet on AI-driven growth, while the $250 put ($113,530 open interest for next Friday) reflects fear of a margin collapse. The truth? Tesla’s future hinges on execution. If FSD and Optimus deliver, the $500 call could be a steal. If not, the $250 put might be your safety net.
Actionable Trades: Calls for the Bold, Puts for the PragmaticFor options traders, the TSLA20260116C500 call (strike $500, expiry Jan 16) is a high-conviction play if you believe in a short-term rebound. The RSI at 32 suggests a bounce is possible, and the block trade at $440 shows support for near-term stability. For downside protection, the TSLA20260123P250TSLA20260123P250-- put (strike $250, expiry Jan 23) offers a floor if the bearish analysts are right.
Stock traders should watch two levels:- Entry near $429 (30D support) if the stock holds above its 200D MA.
- Exit near $461 (middle Bollinger Band) if the rebound gains steam.
A tighter play: buy TSLA if it breaks above $454.3 (today’s high) with volume, or sell short if it drops below $438 (intraday low).
Volatility on the Horizon: Balancing Bullish and Bearish CatalystsTSLA’s path in 2026 is a tightrope. The options market is pricing in both a $250 crash and a $960 moonshot. The stock’s technicals suggest a rebound is likely in the short term, but the fundamentals are murky. If you’re trading this, you need to pick a side—or hedge both. The block trades show big players are doing the latter. For retail traders, the TSLA20260116C500 call and TSLA20260123P250 put offer a way to play the extremes without overexposing your portfolio.
One thing’s certain: TSLA won’t stay quiet. The question is whether you’re ready for the ride.

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