What is the EEM Options Chain?
The EEM options chain displays all available call and put option contracts for the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (EEM), one of the largest and most liquid emerging markets ETFs. EEM tracks the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, providing exposure to equities across China, India, Taiwan, Brazil, South Korea, and other developing economies. EEM options are widely used for macro hedging, expressing views on EM vs. developed markets, and managing currency and geopolitical risk. Our free EEM options chain viewer provides real-time bid/ask quotes, last trade price, volume, open interest, implied volatility, and the full suite of Greeks (Delta, Gamma, Theta, Vega) for every contract.
Why Use Our EEM Options Chain Viewer?
EEM options offer liquid exposure to emerging markets without trading individual country ETFs or ADRs. Traders use EEM options for dollar-strength plays, China policy bets, and broad EM momentum. The ETF often moves on Fed policy, commodity prices, and EM-specific flows.
EEM Calls & Puts Side-by-Side
View EEM calls and puts in a traditional options chain layout, grouped by expiration date with the strike price as the center column for easy comparison.
Powerful Filters
Filter EEM options by expiration date, strike price range, and contract type (calls only, puts only, or both) to quickly find the contracts that match your strategy.
Near Real-Time EEM Data
EEM options data auto-refreshes every 30 seconds so you always see current bid/ask spreads, volume, and implied volatility without manually reloading.
Full Greeks & IV for EEM
Every EEM contract displays Delta, Gamma, Theta, Vega, and implied volatility — essential metrics for evaluating risk and pricing efficiency.
EEM Options Trading Tips
EEM tends to be sensitive to the U.S. dollar — a stronger dollar often pressures EM equities; consider pairs with DXY or UUP.
China weight drives a large portion of EEM returns; watch for China stimulus and regulatory headlines.
IV tends to rise ahead of Fed meetings and major EM central bank decisions; selling premium can capture elevated IV.
Monthly and quarterly options are typically more liquid than weeklies; use them for longer-dated macro bets.
How to Use the EEM Options Chain
- 1
View the EEM Chain
The EEM options chain loads automatically when you visit this page. All available expirations and strikes are displayed with real-time data.
- 2
Filter by Expiration & Strike
Use the expiration date dropdown and strike price range inputs to narrow down the EEM chain to the contracts you care about.
- 3
Analyze Quotes & Greeks
Review bid/ask spreads, volume, open interest, IV, and Greeks for each EEM contract. The data refreshes automatically every 30 seconds.