
Gamma walls are the price levels where market-maker hedging piles up. They're the strikes where the most options gamma sits — and where price tends to stall, bounce, or break with force.
When you buy or sell an option, a market maker usually takes the other side. They don't want a directional bet, so they hedge in the underlying — buying or selling futures to stay neutral as price moves. The size of that hedging isn't constant. It clusters around the strikes where the most option open interest lives.
Gamma measures how fast a market maker's hedge has to change as price moves. Where gamma is large, even a small move in price forces a lot of hedging. Those concentration points are the walls.
Two walls matter most on any given day:
Gamma walls don't predict direction. What they do is mark the levels where the market's own plumbing is most likely to react — the spots where price has a reason to pause, reverse, or speed up that has nothing to do with the news. Knowing where today's walls sit tells you which levels are likely to matter before the session even starts.
Gamma walls are "hidden walls" that sit separate from your usual daily support and resistance. They may congregate near the levels you already track, but they'll just as often form above or below them — somewhere your standard levels give no reason to expect. And unlike fixed daily levels, gamma walls are dynamic: they move with the price action as market makers continuously re-hedge against it. A wall that capped price this morning can migrate by the afternoon.
A gamma wall is a price level where market-maker hedging is concentrated — so price tends to respect it until it doesn't, and the break can be sharp.
Dark Horse GEX computes the day's call wall and put wall for the futures you trade — ES, NQ, NDX, and SPX — and plots them in a sub-chart that sits below your price chart, the same way you'd run RSI or MACD. Your price candles stay clean up top; the walls live in their own pane right beneath, lined up to the same time axis, so you can see where price sits relative to them in real time. No spreadsheet, no separate terminal. Just another indicator on the platform you already use.
Not investment advice. For educational purposes only. Market maker positioning levels, not trade signals.