- Blog
- How to Read Net GEX — A 5-Step Field Guide for Futures Traders

How to Read Net GEX — A 5-Step Field Guide for Futures Traders
Net GEX (ZGR) is the dealer-hedging direction-bias metric. Learn how to read sign, magnitude, slope and divergence in 5 concrete steps — with worked examples on ES and NQ.
TL;DR — Net GEX (or ZGR in Hermēs) is the direction-and-strength version of the regime story Zero Gamma tells in space. Read it in 5 steps: sign → magnitude → slope → divergence → 0Γ cross-check. Get those right and most ES / NQ intraday "what's this market doing?" moments resolve themselves.
What Net GEX is, in one sentence
Net Gamma Exposure is the sum of signed dealer gamma across the entire option chain at the current spot. Positive means dealers are net long gamma (they'll sell rallies and buy dips). Negative means dealers are net short gamma (they'll buy rallies and sell dips).
If you've already read What Is Zero Gamma, the simplest way to think about it is:
- Zero Gamma = the price where dealer net gamma flips sign
- Net GEX = the amount of dealer gamma at the current price
One is a level. The other is a magnitude. You need both.
Why most retail traders read it wrong
The single most common mistake is treating Net GEX as a buy / sell signal. It isn't. Net GEX tells you how dealers will react to the next move, not what spot will do next. A trader who buys ES because "Net GEX went green" is reading the indicator three layers shallow.
What experienced flow traders actually do is far more boring: they treat Net GEX as a regime filter that re-weights their other signals. Strong positive Net GEX downweights breakout setups and upweights fade setups. Strong negative Net GEX does the opposite.
The 5-step routine
This is the exact sequence we recommend to new Hermēs users on Day 1. It takes about 60 seconds per scan once you internalise it.
Step 1 — Check the sign
Open the HuntingFlow Tactical HUD and look at the NET GEX card. Three states:
- Green ( + ) — dealers long gamma → market will try to mean-revert
- Red ( − ) — dealers short gamma → market will try to trend
- Neutral (≈ 0) — regime is undefined → expect chop or transition
The sign is your behavioural prior — it shifts the base rate for what should happen, but it doesn't predict the next tick.
Step 2 — Read the magnitude
Magnitude is what separates "weak regime" from "regime-on." In Hermēs the bar shows |Net GEX| as a fraction of the day's intraday range (that's the ZGR normalisation). Three buckets:
- < 30% — weak; act as if the signal isn't there
- 30 – 70% — material; weight your setups accordingly
- > 70% — dominant; trade in the direction the regime favours, fade against it only with extra confirmation
Step 3 — Watch the slope
Sign and magnitude give you where you are. Slope tells you where you're going. Look at the spark line under the Net GEX number (or the 30-minute window in the HUD).
- Rising slope, positive sign — dealers are getting longer gamma → expect range to compress, options sellers re-loading
- Falling slope, positive sign — dealers are unwinding → range may expand soon, watch for regime flip
- Rising slope, negative sign — dealers are getting less short → tail risk is being lifted, watch for sharp counter-trend snap
- Falling slope, negative sign — dealers are getting more short → trend leg can extend, do not fade
Step 4 — Hunt for divergence
This is where alpha lives. Hermēs draws spot and Net GEX as two overlaid lines on the Gamma Chart. When they diverge, something structural is happening:
- Spot down, Net GEX up → a large buyer is building positioning into weakness. Often precedes a reversal in 1-3 sessions.
- Spot up, Net GEX down → distribution. Retail is buying, dealers are getting shorter. Often precedes a flush.
Divergence is rare — maybe 5-8 trade-able instances per quarter on ES — but the hit rate is materially higher than any other Net GEX read.
Step 5 — Cross-check Zero Gamma
Last sanity check: does the sign of Net GEX match the side of 0Γ you're on?
- Spot above 0Γ + positive Net GEX → Consistent, regime is robust, trade with confidence
- Spot below 0Γ + negative Net GEX → Consistent, regime is robust
- Spot above 0Γ + negative Net GEX → Fragile, regime is breaking down → reduce size
- Spot below 0Γ + positive Net GEX → Fragile, regime is rebuilding → wait for resolution
When the sign disagrees, you're at an inflection. Don't be the hero — let the next 15 minutes tell you which side wins.
Worked example: 2026-04-17 ES open
- 08:30 ET — Spot 5410, 0Γ 5398, Net GEX +$680M, slope flat. → Above 0Γ + positive + strong magnitude = textbook Long Gamma. Sized fade plays around the Call Wall at 5425.
- 10:15 ET — Spot 5418, 0Γ 5400 (drifted up), Net GEX +$340M, slope falling fast. → Sign still positive but magnitude halved and slope falling → regime weakening, first warning.
- 11:42 ET — Spot 5395, 0Γ 5400, Net GEX -$110M, slope still falling. → Net GEX flipped before 0Γ break confirmed → divergence signal, position size cut to 25%.
- 11:48 ET — Spot 5390 breaks 0Γ. Net GEX -$320M. → Both signs agree, dominant magnitude → momentum playbook engaged.
Day's low ended up at 5362, 28 points lower. Net GEX called the transition first.
Common pitfalls
- Don't trade single-bar Net GEX prints. It's a noisy series. Always look at 5-minute smoothed reading or longer.
- Don't conflate magnitude with volatility. High |Net GEX| in Long Gamma = low realised vol. The two are inversely related.
- Net GEX is not a stop-loss tool. Position size and structural levels (Call/Put walls, prior day high/low) are. Net GEX is a regime overlay, full stop.
Where Net GEX fits in the Hermēs stack
This is layer 3 ("Positioning") of the GEX framework. The layers, in order:
- Regime — Zero Gamma
- Structure — Call Wall, Put Wall, Gamma Profile
- Positioning — Net GEX (this article), DEX Flow, Vanna
The full Hermēs methodology layers these into a Confluence score — see the framework guide for the scoring rubric.
See it live
Net GEX, ZGR, and the full Gamma Chart are core Pro features. Try them on real ES / NQ data on the HuntingFlow page — or compare plans on pricing.
Related:
- What Is Zero Gamma — the level-based companion to Net GEX
- Long vs Short Gamma Regime — how to actually trade the two regimes Net GEX identifies
- Futures Trader Playbook — 5 real scenarios using these signals end-to-end
Author

Categories
More Posts

What Is Zero Gamma (and Why It's the Most Important Line on Your Chart)
Zero Gamma — the price where dealer hedging flips from stabilising to destabilising. Here's how to find it, why it moves, and how it changes the way you read ES/NQ intraday.


Long Gamma vs Short Gamma Regime — A Trader's Field Guide
Above zero gamma the market acts like a pendulum. Below it, like an avalanche. Here's the practical difference — entry rules, stop logic, time-of-day patterns, and the mistakes that blow up undisciplined traders.

Newsletter
Join the community
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest news and updates