CONI - GraniteShares 2x Short COIN Daily ETF
The fund manager will enter into one or more swap agreements with major financial institutions for a specified period ranging from a day to more than one year whereby the fund and the financial institution will agree to exchange the return earned or realized on the underlying stock. The fund is non-diversified.
As of Jun 30, 2026: spot at $63.77, ATM IV 132.4%, max pain $54.00, net GEX $15.1K.
- Sector
- Financial Services
- Industry
- Asset Management
- Market Cap
- $683.3M
- Beta
- -3.94
- 52-Week Range
- 28.4-141.65
- Dividend Yield
- $0.60
- IPO Date
- Sep 4, 2024
- Exchange
- NASDAQ
What CONI Looks Like to Options Traders Today
IV rank of 33.4% sits near the 1-year median, where strategy choice depends on directional conviction and the event calendar rather than vol regime alone; positive net gamma exposure ($15.1K) means dealers hedge against trend, damping realized volatility and biasing price toward heavy-OI strikes; the 25-delta skew (-0.115) prices puts richer than calls, the typical equity downside-protection skew.
What This Page Covers
The CONI overview links into per-metric analysis views: max pain, gamma exposure, volatility skew, expected move, options chain, open interest history, and aggregate Greeks. Microstructure data is available on short interest, short volume, fail-to-deliver, and market structure.
Frequently asked CONI overview questions
- What is CONI?
- CONI is the ticker symbol for GraniteShares 2x Short COIN Daily ETF, an listed exchange-traded fund. The fund manager will enter into one or more swap agreements with major financial institutions for a specified period ranging from a day to more than one year whereby the fund and the financial institution will agree to exchange the return earned or realized on the underlying stock. The fund is non-diversified. Listed on NASDAQ. CONI is the ETF ticker shown on this page; ETF traders use the fund for diversified exposure to its underlying basket, for sector and factor rotation, and for hedging or replication strategies via the listed options chain.
- What does the CONI options snapshot look like today?
- As of Jun 30, 2026, the CONI options snapshot shows spot at $63.77, ATM IV 132.4%, IV rank 33.4%, max pain $54.00, net GEX $15.1K, expected move 37.96%. The full options chain, Greeks by strike and expiration, per-strike open-interest distribution, dealer gamma and delta exposure, and the volatility skew surface are linked from this overview page. Each per-metric route refreshes once per trading session and reflects the most recent close-of-business listed-options state.
- What are CONI's key statistics?
- GraniteShares 2x Short COIN Daily ETF (CONI) carries a market capitalization of $683.3M, 52-week range of 28.4-141.65. Full holdings disclosure, expense ratio, and tracking-error history live on the per-ticker fundamentals page or the sponsor's site; daily NAV and premium/discount-to-NAV are accessible from the same view. These structural inputs frame how the ETF options market prices implied volatility relative to its constituents.
- What sector or industry does CONI belong to?
- GraniteShares 2x Short COIN Daily ETF operates in the Financial Services sector, in the Asset Management industry. Sector classification affects how the ticker correlates with sector ETFs, how it reacts to macro factors like rate moves and commodity prices, and how its options pricing compares to sector peers. Compare CONI's implied volatility and skew against sector benchmarks to gauge whether the options market is pricing single-name or systemic risk relative to the broader peer group.
- How current is the CONI data on this page?
- The options snapshot above is dated Jun 30, 2026 and refreshes once per session, with all per-strike Greeks and exposure aggregates recomputed at the daily close. Fund-level fields (sponsor, expense ratio, holdings concentration where available) refresh from the vendor feed nightly. ETF-specific filings (N-CSR, N-PX, N-CEN) update on the SEC EDGAR cadence. FINRA microstructure data refreshes on the source's cadence; for ETFs the off-exchange volume signal is dominated by authorized-participant creation and redemption rather than directional flow.