What is the Put-Call Ratio?
The Put-Call Ratio (PCR) is one of the most widely-used sentiment indicators in derivatives markets. It compares the volume (or open interest) of put options to call options.
PCR Formula:
PCR = Total Put Open Interest / Total Call Open Interest
A PCR of 1.0 means equal put and call open interest. Above 1.0 means more puts than calls; below 1.0 means more calls than puts.
Interpreting PCR for NIFTY
| PCR Range | Market Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Below 0.7 | Extremely bullish sentiment — contrarian bearish signal |
| 0.7 - 0.9 | Moderately bullish |
| 0.9 - 1.1 | Neutral / Range-bound |
| 1.1 - 1.3 | Moderately bearish |
| Above 1.3 | Extreme fear — contrarian bullish signal |
The key insight: PCR is a contrarian indicator. Extreme readings signal reversal, not continuation.
PCR as a Contrarian Signal
When everyone buys puts (PCR > 1.3), it means:
- Maximum fear is priced in
- Most hedgers have hedged
- There's very little incremental selling pressure left
This is when NIFTY often stages powerful recovery rallies — because the "fuel" for a down move (unhedged longs converting to puts) has been exhausted.
Conversely, when PCR drops below 0.75 with NIFTY at highs, complacency has set in. Market makers will test the downside.
Strike-Level PCR: The Real Edge
Looking at overall PCR is useful, but strike-level PCR is where serious traders gain an edge.
Analyzing which strikes have the highest put open interest vs call open interest reveals:
- Strong support levels: Strikes with massive put writing (put sellers expect the market to stay above)
- Strong resistance levels: Strikes with massive call writing (call sellers expect the market to stay below)
- Max Pain point: The strike where maximum option contracts expire worthless
Use STOCKAN's PCR Analyzer to visualize this strike-by-strike distribution in real-time.
Combining PCR with India VIX
PCR and VIX together create a powerful sentiment matrix:
| VIX | PCR | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Low (<12) | Low (<0.8) | Double complacency — high crash risk |
| High (>18) | High (>1.3) | Maximum fear — potential reversal up |
| Rising VIX | Rising PCR | Trend continuation — stay with bears |
| Falling VIX | Rising PCR | Mixed signal — wait for clarity |
Practical PCR Trading Strategies
Strategy 1: PCR Bounce Trade
- Wait for PCR to spike above 1.30 on high volume
- Look for NIFTY to hold key support (50 EMA or major round number)
- Buy ATM calls with 3-5 days to expiry
- Target: PCR normalize back to 1.0-1.1
Strategy 2: PCR Fade at Extremes
- When NIFTY is near all-time highs AND PCR drops below 0.70
- Consider buying protective puts or reducing long delta
- Ideal for portfolio hedging during complacency phases
Conclusion
PCR is not a crystal ball, but used consistently as a sentiment barometer — especially at extreme readings — it provides a statistically significant edge in timing NIFTY options trades. Always combine it with price action and VIX for highest probability setups.