--- title: "PLTR's options structure before earnings: Direction is easy to choose, cost is hard to control." type: "Topics" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/topics/40092752.md" description: "First, a position update: $Palantir Tech(PLTR.US) current price $145.73, earnings on 5/4, with 12 trading days left. It has pulled back 22% from the high of $187.28 on 1/7, but is still up 55.7% YoY, a typical "high-level consolidation + AI narrative remains strong" combination. Three things in the options market: First, the Call/Put volume ratio is 4.7M vs 2.9M, a ratio of 1.6. Market sentiment is clearly bullish..." datetime: "2026-04-22T09:26:02.000Z" locales: - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/topics/40092752.md) - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/topics/40092752.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/topics/40092752.md) author: "[好柿花生Option](https://longbridge.com/en/profiles/27346521.md)" --- # PLTR's options structure before earnings: Direction is easy to choose, cost is hard to control. First, a ticker update: $Palantir Tech(PLTR.US) is currently at $145.73, with earnings on 5/4, leaving 12 trading days. It has pulled back 22% from the $187.28 high on 1/7, but is still up 55.7% YoY, a classic case of "high-level consolidation + the AI narrative remains alive". **Three things in the options market:** First, the Call/Put volume ratio is 4.7M vs 2.9M, a ratio of 1.6. Market sentiment is clearly bullish, but not to the point of frenzy—when it gets truly extreme, this ratio can surge above 3. Second, IV is 58% with an IV Percentile of 55P. For PLTR, this is **neutral to low**—with 12 days to go before earnings, there hasn't been a large-scale vol spike yet, indicating smart money is still slowly building positions. This is good because premiums aren't expensive; it's also bad because the risk of an IV crush still exists. Third, there's a $150 Call Wall and a $140 Put Wall. **These two gamma magnet levels are pinning PLTR in the $140-$150 range**—unless earnings significantly beat expectations, it will be difficult for the stock price to break out of this box from this week into next. * * * **My strategy: Bull Call Spread · Expiring 5/1 · $145/$155** - Buy $145 Call (ATM) - Sell $155 Call (OTM) - Net premium approx. $380 (current price ~$3.8/contract) - Max profit $620 (ratio 1.63) - Break-even $148.8 **Why this choice:** IV isn't cheap but isn't expensive either. Naked buying of the $145 Call would fully expose you to IV crush (vol collapses immediately after earnings), making the single-leg trade not cost-effective. The Bull Call Spread hedges part of the vega by selling the $155 Call, **reducing the pain point of an IV crush**. Why choose the 5/1 expiry over 5/15? I don't want to hold overnight on the earnings day of 5/4. The 5/1 expiry lets me capture the most expensive time value to sell on the day before earnings (peak IV), then close the position and exit. The 5/15 expiry could capture the earnings result, but at the cost of being uncontrollable. * * * **When is it not advisable to do this?** 1. If you firmly believe PLTR will jump over $155 and head straight to $170, the capped profit of the Spread isn't worthwhile; a naked Call or delta position would be better. 2. If you're afraid PLTR's earnings will disappoint and it will drop below $140, this structure would lose 100% of the premium—you could simultaneously buy a $135 Put for insurance. 3. IV at 58% itself isn't high, but if IV rises above 65% next week before you enter, the cost will jump a notch. ### Related Stocks - [TECH.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/TECH.US.md) - [PLTR.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/PLTR.US.md) - [TECH.AU](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/TECH.AU.md) ## Comments (1) - **数个一二三四五 · 2026-04-22T10:50:43.000Z**: Good Persimmon, why didn't you recommend an Iron Condor this time? The sideways squeeze is so severe.