NuScale Power Corp. (SMR) call options volume rose dramatically today after a Craig-Hallum report maintained a Buy on SMR stock. SMR is up over 11% today, and an unusual volume of call options has traded.
SMR is at $51.24 today, up $5.81, or +11.8%. This is a 52-week high for SMR stock.
As a result, a large volume of call options has traded, as seen in today’s Barchart Unusual Stock Options Activity Report.
It shows that over 27,000 call options expiring in 9 days on Oct. 24 have traded at the $55.00 strike price, i.e., out-of-the-money (OTM). The midpoint premium is $4.30, indicating that buyers of these calls may believe that SMR could rise to $59.30 by then (i.e., up +15.7% from today).
Other tranches of OTM calls and OTM puts have also traded with less volume, but still high compared to their prior numbers outstanding.
The table above shows that SMR options are very popular today. But, what is the best play here?
The yields here for short sellers are quite attractive. For example, the Oct. 24 covered call yield play (buying SMR and selling OTM calls) now yields over 6.7%%:
$3.55/ 52.92 = 0.6708 = 6.708% for 9 days
The investor who buys 100 shares for $5,292 today can immediately sell that stock in a covered call at the $55.00 strike price for $3.55. The potential total return is:
$5,500 + $355 = $5,855
$5,855 – $5,292 = $563
$563 / $5,292 = 0.106386 = +10.6386% over 9 days
The risk here is that if SMR falls below $52.92 by Oct. 24, the investor may end up with an unrealized loss. But, at least there is a lower breakeven point:
$52.92 – $3.55 income received = $49.37 breakeven
That is -6.7% below today’s price, providing some downside protection.
Moreover, the Report today shows that the Dec. 19, 2025, expiry $50 strike price puts have been popular. It’s possible that some of the call option buyers are buying these OTM puts to protect their downside.
The only problem is that these puts are more expensive to buy than the near-term calls mentioned above. As a result, as a defensive move, buying these puts while shorting 9-day calls will result in a debit (i.e., a cash outlay) of almost $600:

