Outrageous Predictions
Die Grüne Revolution der Schweiz: 30 Milliarden Franken-Initiative bis 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: Today’s Options Brief covers the post-event vol crush and what it looks like live, the UNH earnings vol mispricing lesson (4% implied, 9% realised) applicable across the rest of reporting season, and Tesla’s after-close earnings where the 5%-versus-8% implied-versus-realised gap frames the straddle-versus-iron-condor question.
Breaking: Trump extends the ceasefire. Oil falls, futures rally, and the vol premium priced for a binary that never arrived begins to crush — with Tesla still on the desk for tonight.
This morning’s dominant development: President Trump is extending the US–Iran ceasefire. The binary event risk that drove Tuesday’s broad selloff — the S&P 500 –0.63%, RUT –1.00%, VIX closing at 19.50 — has resolved constructively. Oil is selling off as the Hormuz risk premium deflates: WTI futures at $88.85 (–0.91%), Brent at $97.56 (–0.93%). US equity futures are pointing meaningfully higher: S&P 500 futures +0.56% to 7,139.50, Nasdaq 100 futures +0.72%, Russell 2000 futures +0.96%. Front-month VIX futures are falling 1.69% to 20.60. The short-dated vol premium that was explicitly priced for today’s binary is now set to crush. Tesla earnings after tonight’s close remain the session’s remaining event risk.
The binary resolved to the upside. Oil falls, futures rally, and a vol crush is underway — but the session isn’t over.
Iran ceasefire extended. President Trump is extending the US–Iran ceasefire, removing the event risk that dominated Tuesday’s session. Oil futures are falling sharply as the Hormuz risk premium deflates: WTI at $88.85 (–0.91%), Brent at $97.56 (–0.93%). Equity futures across the board are pointing higher — Russell 2000 futures leading at +0.96%, consistent with a relief rotation that benefits domestic risk assets most. Front-month VIX futures are already dropping to 20.60 (–1.69%). The market that sold off into the deadline is now buying back in with the uncertainty removed. Whether the extension is substantive or procedural remains a question for later in the session; for now, the short-term risk premium is deflating.
Warsh and the Fed. Yesterday’s Senate Banking Committee hearing for Kevin Warsh remains the one unresolved institutional overhang from the original setup. “Inflation is a choice” was the headline line; confirmation odds on Polymarket sit at 34% before Powell’s May 15 term end. This is a slower-moving uncertainty than a ceasefire deadline, and it continues to provide a structural bid under the longer end of the VIX curve even as the front end compresses on the ceasefire extension.
Broad declines at yesterday’s close; a sharp reversal underway this morning on ceasefire extension news.
Market pulse: The session has flipped from risk-off to risk-on in a single headline. Oil falling and equity futures rallying simultaneously is the cleanest confirmation of a ceasefire-extension read; VIX futures declining 1.69% confirms the short-dated vol premium is already compressing.
The geopolitical binary has resolved — and the vol surface is adjusting accordingly. Two setups remain on the desk.
Important note: The strategies and examples provided in this article are purely for educational purposes. They are intended to assist in shaping your thought process and should not be replicated or implemented without careful consideration. Every investor or trader must conduct their own due diligence and take into account their unique financial situation, risk tolerance, and investment objectives before making any decisions. Remember, investing in the stock market carries risk, and it’s crucial to make informed decisions.
1. The VIX1D vol crush. Yesterday’s 33.55% spike in VIX1D to 16.20 was a textbook example of short-dated implied vol pricing a discrete binary event. That event has now resolved — constructively. The premium that was bid specifically for the ceasefire expiry will deflate quickly; VIX1D is likely to compress sharply as the event horizon disappears. Front-month VIX futures have already begun moving in this direction, falling 1.69% to 20.60 this morning. Energy derivatives, where the Hormuz risk premium was most directly expressed, may see an even faster compression as oil prices fall. This is the post-event vol crush in real time: the insurance priced for a specific outcome is now expiring, and premium decays at speed when the uncertainty that priced it is removed. For those who had positioned on the protection side of the binary, the extension is the exit signal on that hedge.
2. UNH — the earnings vol mispricing template. The options market priced a 4.16% implied move into UnitedHealth’s Q1 earnings. The stock delivered approximately 9% — roughly double the implied expectation. The structural reason is familiar: in sectors where regulatory and political narratives (ACA sensitivity, medical loss ratio risk) suppress analyst conviction, consensus estimates tend to cluster conservatively, compressing the implied move below what realised outcomes warrant. This is the clearest earnings IV mispricing of the week, and it functions as a screening template for the remainder of reporting season. Names where analyst dispersion is high, sector sentiment is divided, and the headline implied move is below the stock’s trailing average realised move on earnings are the candidates.
3. Tesla tonight — two frameworks, one vol question. Tesla reports Q1 earnings after tonight’s close. Options price approximately a 5% implied move; the stock’s historical average realised move on earnings is closer to 8%. Deliveries already disappointed (358K vs 372K), and direction post-earnings is genuinely difficult to call. Gamma is concentrated at $400 calls and $380 puts.
The central question is whether 5% implied is cheap relative to what Tesla typically delivers, or adequate given the already-digested delivery miss. If the former, a long straddle is one often-used approach — long gamma, long vega, profitable when realised vol exceeds implied. If the latter, a short iron condor is a possible alternative — short gamma, short vega, profitable when the stock stays inside a defined range. The two express opposite vol views; they cannot both be right on the same name on the same night. The 5%-versus-8% gap is the input each trader needs to form their own assessment.
The session opens materially differently from where Tuesday closed. The geopolitical binary has resolved constructively: oil is falling, equity futures are rallying, and the short-dated vol premium priced for a ceasefire expiry is crushing. What remains on the desk: the UNH earnings vol mispricing lesson applicable across the rest of reporting season, and Tesla’s after-close earnings where the straddle-versus-iron-condor framework on the 5%-versus-8% implied-versus-realised gap still stands. The Warsh/Fed uncertainty is the one unresolved structural overhang. The morning is risk-on — the question is how much of that is a genuine regime shift and how much is relief premium that fades by the afternoon.
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