This page reflects AGCO options positioning from the latest published market-close snapshot. Intraday price and contract changes are not displayed.
Published Snapshot
May 20, 2026 close
Max Pain — AGCO
Data as of market close May 20, 2026
Nearest listed expiration 2026-06-18 shows max pain at $130.00 (15.23 above spot). Use this page to evaluate pin-risk zones, strike pressure, and open-interest concentration before selecting trade structure.
Max Pain Strike
$130.00
Nearest expiry
Expected Move
±$9.80
±8.5%
Days to Expiry
29
Calendar days
Total Call OI
95
Nearest expiry
Total Put OI
158
Nearest expiry
P/C OI Ratio
1.66
Put-heavy
Spot Price
$114.77
Published close
Consensus
-
Open report for full read
Max Pain by Expiration
Pain by Strike
Drill into expiration
Selected: 2026-06-18
Expiration
Max Pain Strike
Last Updated
2026-04-17
$120.00
4/17/2026, 11:02:04 PM
2026-05-15
$130.00
5/15/2026, 11:01:49 PM
2026-06-18NextUpdated
$130.00
5/20/2026, 11:02:02 PM
2026-07-17
$115.00
5/20/2026, 11:02:02 PM
2026-08-21
$105.00
5/20/2026, 11:02:02 PM
2026-11-20
$115.00
5/20/2026, 11:02:02 PM
Selected expiration: 2026-06-18 at max pain $130.00.
AGCO pain by strike for 2026-06-18 expiration
Strike
Call Pain
Put Pain
Total Pain
90
0
451000
451000
95
0
377500
377500
100
0
305500
305500
105
0
246500
246500
110
0
199000
199000
115
0
156000
156000
120
8000
117500
125500
125
20000
79000
99000
130
33500
56500
90000
135
57500
34000
91500
140
82000
11500
93500
145
126000
0
126000
150
172500
0
172500
165
313500
0
313500
How to Read Max Pain
Compare pin-risk and strike-pressure across expirations from the latest published close.
What max pain measures
Max pain is the strike where option holders would collectively lose the most at expiration, based on open interest across the listed chain.
How traders use it
It is most useful as a possible pinning zone, especially when spot is already trading near a crowded strike into expiration.
What can break it
Strong directional flows, news, or fast spot moves can overwhelm any pinning tendency, so max pain should support a thesis rather than drive it alone.
The closer you are to expiration, the more useful this becomes as context and the less useful it is as a standalone prediction.