This page reflects ESEA options positioning from the latest published market-close snapshot. Intraday price and contract changes are not displayed.
Published Snapshot
Mar 27, 2026 close
Expected Move — ESEA
Data as of market close Mar 27, 2026
Expected-move data is currently unavailable for this symbol. Compare the implied range across expirations to gauge term-structure shifts in uncertainty.
No expected move data available.
How to Use Expected Move
Read the implied range as a volatility map from the latest published close, not as a price target.
What it represents
Expected move estimates the range options are pricing for each expiration, roughly around a one-standard-deviation move from the current spot level.
How traders use it
It helps frame breakout distance, premium-selling width, and whether a proposed strike sits inside or outside what the market is already pricing.
What to remember
The range is probability framing, not certainty. Stocks can easily finish well inside or well outside the expected move when catalysts hit.
Use expected move with structure, liquidity, and catalyst context before treating a range as actionable.