Options trading volume has risen sharply in recent years, and a significant portion of this increase is attributed to the growing participation of retail traders. We have discussed retail options trading behavior in previous posts. Reference [1] continues this line of research by examining how retail investors trade stock options and how their attention influences options market activity.
The study posits that retail investors often treat stock options similarly to gambling. The authors construct a Search Volume Index (SVI), which measures the intensity of Google searches for specific keywords across U.S. states, and use it as a proxy for retail investors’ attention to stock options, capturing surges in public interest around firm-specific news such as earnings announcements. They pointed out,
This paper examines how regional gambling propensity relates to retail participation in U.S. options markets. Using state-level Google search data, gambling measures, and regulatory and event-based shocks, we analyze whether gambling intensity is associated with option attention and speculative trading behavior.
We document that option attention is higher in gambling-prone states, particularly around salient events such as earnings announcements. We also show that option search intensity is positively associated with brokerage-related search activity, consistent with attention translating into trading-related behavior…
We further find that lottery-like option characteristics—including out-of-the-money contracts, short maturities, and high implied volatility—receive greater attention in high-gambling states. These results suggest that regional gambling propensity helps explain cross-state variation in speculative option demand.
Finally, we relate option attention to household credit outcomes. Elevated option attention in gambling-prone states is associated with higher short-term borrowing and increased delinquency rates. While these associations do not establish household-level causality, they indicate that gambling-motivated financial attention coincides with measures of financial vulnerability at the state level.
Overall, the findings highlight how regional behavioral traits interact with financial market structure to shape retail participation in derivative markets. Future research may examine whether similar dynamics arise in other highly leveraged products or emerging speculative venues.
In short, this paper shows that retail option trading is higher in U.S. states with a stronger gambling culture, especially around earnings announcements when uncertainty is high. It also finds that this gambling-motivated attention increases trading in short-dated out-of-the-money options and is associated with higher implied volatility and higher household debt.
This paper provides additional and interesting insights into retail options behavior. Let us know what you think in the comments below or in the discussion forum.
References
[1] Matthew Flynn, Yifan Liu, Ivilina Popova, Do retail traders gamble on stock options? Journal of Financial Markets, 2026
Originally Published Here: Retail Options Trading and Gambling Behavior
source https://harbourfronts.com/retail-options-trading-gambling-behavior/