Thermodynamic Automaton Computer
writing framework. Every section resolves one reader confusion state. Read straight through.
Founder, TWIST POOL Labs · TAC Research · NanoCERN Unit, Pune
First-principles finance educator · 10+ years in Indian capital markets
When you open an “Option Chain” on Zerodha Kite or Sensibull, you will see a long list of Strike Prices. Some are shaded in yellow/blue, and some are white. These are the three “Zones” of an option contract, often called Moneyness.…
When you open an “Option Chain” on Zerodha Kite or Sensibull, you will see a long list of Strike Prices. Some are shaded in yellow/blue, and some are white. These are the three “Zones” of an option contract, often called Moneyness.
In first-principles terms, Moneyness is the State Space of the Contract.
It tells you the relationship between the Current Market Price and the Strike Price. Choosing the wrong zone is the #1 reason why beginners lose money, even when they are right about the market direction. Let’s master the three zones.
1. ATM: At-the-Money (The Center of Gravity)
Definition: The Strike Price that is closest to the current Market Price.
- The Physics: This is where the battle is most intense.
- The Characteristics: ATM options have the highest Theta (Time Decay) and the highest Vega (Volatility Sensitivity). They are extremely sensitive to everything.
- The Use Case: Best for “Straddles” (C5 Spoke Straddle) where you are betting on a massive move in either direction.
2. ITM: In-the-Money (The Zone of Reality)
Definition: Strike prices that already have “Intrinsic Value” (C5 Spoke Option Premium).
For a Call: Any strike below* the current price. (e.g., Nifty at 22,000; 21,900 Call is ITM).
For a Put: Any strike above* the current price.
- The Physics: These options are Heavy with Reality.
- The Characteristics: They have a high Delta (they move 1:1 with the market) and low Time Decay.
- The Use Case: Professional traders use ITM options because they don’t want to lose money just because time passed.
3. OTM: Out-of-the-Money (The Zone of Hope)
Definition: Strike prices that have zero intrinsic value. They are 100% “Extrinsic Value.”
For a Call: Any strike above* the current price.
For a Put: Any strike below* the current price.
- The Physics: These options are Pure Probability.
- The Characteristics: They are very cheap, but they have a very low Delta. Even if the Nifty moves up by ₹50, an OTM option might only move by ₹2.
- The Result: Most OTM options expire at Zero.
4. The “Cheapness” Trap (The First Principle of Value)
Beginners buy OTM options because they are cheap (e.g., ₹5 instead of ₹200).
The Logic: “If I buy 100 lots of a ₹5 option, and it becomes ₹50, I will be a millionaire!”*
- The Reality: For that ₹5 option to become ₹50, the Nifty must move 500 points in 2 days. The probability of that happening is less than 1%.
The Verdict: OTM options are the most expensive in terms of Risk. You are paying for a miracle. ITM options are “expensive” in price, but they are the cheapest in terms of Probability.
Summary Checklist: The Moneyness Audit
| Zone | Price | Delta (Velocity) | Theta (Decay) | Win Probability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ITM | High | High (> 0.7) | Low | High |
| ATM | Medium | Medium (0.5) | Maximum | 50/50 |
| OTM | Low | Low (< 0.3) | High | Low |
The “Smart Friend” Advice
Think of these zones like a race.
- ITM: You are already at the finish line. You just need to stay there.
- ATM: You are at the starting line.
- OTM: You are 5 kilometers behind the starting line and the race has already started.
If you are a serious trader, stick to ITM or ATM options. Leave the OTM “Lottery Tickets” to the gamblers. Your goal is to manage capital, not to hope for a miracle.
Now that you understand the “Zones,” let’s look at the “Clock” that is constantly ticking against you.
Move to C5 Spoke 3: Theta Decay: Why Time is the Enemy of the Option Buyer to see the ultimate entropy at work.
Frequently Asked Questions
See the full explanation in the section above.
See the full explanation in the section above.
See the full explanation in the section above.
Beginners buy OTM options because they are cheap (e.g., ₹5 instead of ₹200).