
Above zero gamma the market is a pendulum; below it, an avalanche. Entry rules, stop logic, time-of-day patterns, and the mistakes that blow up undisciplined traders.
TL;DR — Long Gamma and Short Gamma are the two market states defined by which side of Zero Gamma spot sits on. Same chart, two completely different trading personalities. The traders who blow up on Short Gamma days are the ones using Long Gamma rules. The traders who underperform on Long Gamma days are the ones using Short Gamma rules.
Imagine the S&P 500 as a ball, and dealer hedging as the surface it sits on.
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This single image explains 80% of what you need to know about gamma regimes. Everything below is just the operational details.
Almost everything. Here's the field-guide cheat sheet:
| Variable | Long Gamma (above 0Γ) | Short Gamma (below 0Γ) |
|---|---|---|
| Realised volatility | Low / suppressed | High / expanded |
| Tape behaviour | Mean-reverting | Trending |
| Spot to ATR | Compressed | Stretched |
| Gap risk | Low | High |
| Stops | Tight, hold close | Wide, expect wicks |
| Sizing | Larger (R:R compressed) | Smaller (slippage) |
| Best entry style | Fade extremes | Follow momentum |
| Best time of day | 09:45 – 14:30 ET | Always, but accelerates 14:30 – 16:00 ET |
| News reaction | Quickly faded | Extended into trend |
| Wall behaviour | Walls hold | Walls break |
Read that table again. Every row inverts between the two regimes. That's the level of behavioural change you're navigating.
Long Gamma is the regime that pays patient, disciplined fade traders and punishes momentum chasers.
Setup logic:
Stop logic:
1.5 × ATR(5m) is usually enoughTarget logic:
Sizing: Larger than your baseline. The R:R is compressed (small moves), so volume has to compensate.
Short Gamma is the regime that pays disciplined breakout / momentum traders and punishes fade-and-pray contrarians.
Setup logic:
Stop logic:
2.5 × ATR(5m) minimumTarget logic:
Sizing: Smaller than your baseline. Slippage is real; one bad fill in Short Gamma costs 2-3 Long Gamma winners.
Every blown account we've seen at Hermēs has the same pattern:
The setup didn't fail. The regime changed and the trader didn't.
This is the single biggest reason Hermēs surfaces the regime as a screen-dominating HUD card, not buried in a menu. You should never be confused about which regime you're in.
Most retail flow content treats the regime as binary — "we're long gamma today, we're short gamma today." Reality is fuzzier. The transition matters more than the steady state.
Watch for these transition signatures:
When all three line up, the regime is about to flip. The first 15-30 minutes after the flip are usually the highest-information segment of the trading day.
In Hermēs, this is exactly what the Gamma Flip Alert is built to fire on — and why Ultra users get a Discord ping the moment all three conditions converge.
A subtle but high-edge observation:
If you size based on time-of-day, this asymmetry alone should be enough to change your trade selection by 14:00 ET.
If you do nothing else, follow these:
Hermēs displays the current regime as a glowing card on the Tactical HUD and overlays Zero Gamma + Call/Put Walls on the main chart. Every regime flip is detected in real time, pushed to Discord, and timestamped in the HuntingFlow history replay for after-the-fact review.
If you want to actually see which regime you're in on today's ES / NQ — that's the core promise of Hermēs Pro at $49/mo. Ultra at $79/mo adds the full 62-ticker universe and the cross-ticker GEX correlation matrix.
Related:
Long Gamma regimes are mean-reverting, low realised vol, range-bound. Short Gamma regimes are trending, high realised vol, gap-prone. Same chart, opposite trading rules: in Long Gamma you fade strength, in Short Gamma you follow it.
No. The same support / resistance line will hold in Long Gamma and break in Short Gamma. Setup *recognition* stays the same; sizing, stop placement, and target logic must invert.
Per trade, often yes — moves are bigger. But the slippage is also bigger and stops get whipped. For most discretionary traders, Long Gamma days have higher *consistency* of profit, Short Gamma days higher *variance*.
On SPX the median Long Gamma streak is 5-7 sessions, Short Gamma 2-3. Long Gamma is the 'default' state in low-vol environments. The transition is what matters most.
Yes, but with one caveat — NQ's gamma regime tends to be 30-90 minutes leading or lagging ES due to NDX vs SPX option-volume differences. Hermēs computes both separately so the regime sign can disagree across the two.
