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: Friday’s session was one of those days that tests how you think about markets. A jobs report that nearly doubled forecasts. WTI crude crossing $100 on US-Iran military exchanges near the Strait of Hormuz. US equities printing all-time highs. European markets down over 1 percent. All on the same day. Beneath the surface, call options volumes have been surging for weeks, leaving market makers short gamma ...
A stronger-than-expected jobs report and fresh US-Iran exchanges in the Strait of Hormuz collide on the same Friday — setting up a divergent open for Monday.
Friday’s April nonfarm payrolls came in at 115,000 — nearly double the 62,000 consensus — driving US equities to record closes and confirming that the labour market remains resilient. At the same time, fresh US-Iran military exchanges near the Strait of Hormuz pushed WTI crude above $100, left European indices sharply lower, and set up a divergent open this morning.
US equities at records, oil surging, Europe in the red — a clean divergence between a labour-market rally and a geopolitical supply shock.
VIX ticks higher despite record closes, SKEW climbs to 138, and call-volume-driven dealer gamma creates a structural unwind risk beneath the surface.
VIX closed at 17.19, a modest tick higher (+0.64%) despite the equity rally — a quiet signal that institutional hedgers are not standing down even as indices print records. The CBOE SKEW index, which measures the premium investors pay for out-of-the-money downside protection relative to equivalent upside exposure, rose to 138.21 (+1.54%), confirming elevated tail-risk demand beneath the surface. The VVIX — the volatility of the VIX itself, measuring how much the fear gauge is expected to move — gained 3.39% to 96.78, a notable signal that the market does not believe the current calm is permanent. Index-level put/call ratios dropped sharply on the day — the CBOE S&P 500 put/call ratio (PCSX) fell 4.17% to 1.15 — reflecting genuine equity buying, though readings above 1.0 still indicate net defensive positioning persists at the index level.
A structural consideration beneath Friday’s surface calm deserves attention. Call options volumes have surged over recent weeks, leaving market makers with significant short-gamma exposure — meaning they must continuously buy the underlying as markets rise and sell as they fall to remain delta-neutral. This pro-cyclical dynamic has amplified the rally, but it also creates the conditions for an abrupt reversal once that hedging unwinds. Likely de-hedging watch points include the May monthly options expiry, NVIDIA’s upcoming earnings, and month-end portfolio rebalancing by fund managers — any of which could trigger a simultaneous unwind of dealer hedge positions and a rapid repricing of volatility.
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.
Strategy insight – Energy risk reversals. With WTI above $100 and the Strait of Hormuz conflict unresolved, downside put premiums in energy-sector options are elevated — the market is pricing a genuine supply disruption into the put side. A bullish risk reversal — selling an out-of-the-money put at the inflated premium and using those proceeds to buy an out-of-the-money call — can establish upside exposure in energy names at minimal or zero net cost. Selling the expensive downside wing to fund the cheaper upside wing is structurally well suited to this environment: you are capturing the geopolitical risk premium while still participating if crude continues higher. The main risk is the short put: if energy prices fall sharply on a diplomatic resolution, losses on the put leg can exceed the call premium collected.
Strategy insight – Protective puts while the window is open. VIX at 17 sits below its long-run average, making this a relatively low-cost moment to add portfolio protection — and the dealer short-gamma dynamic described above makes the timing more pressing than usual. A put spread on a broad index — buying one put and selling a lower-strike put to offset some of the cost — delivers defined downside protection at a lower outlay than an outright put purchase. With SKEW at 138 and VVIX rising, the market itself is signalling that the benign vol surface may not last; building that protection now, rather than waiting until VIX reprices toward 25 and insurance becomes expensive, is the more disciplined approach. The maximum loss on the put spread is the net premium paid — the full cost of protection if markets continue higher and the spread expires unexercised.
Friday delivered two simultaneous signals: US economic resilience is intact, and the Strait of Hormuz conflict is not resolved. Heading into Monday, US futures are roughly flat, European futures are under modest pressure, and Korea’s market is hitting fresh records on continued AI-chip demand — a telling global divergence. The regime is LOW VOL BULL, but SKEW and VVIX are both climbing, dealer gamma is elevated, and volatility could reprice quickly; use the current cost-of-vol environment to build exposure and protection, not to sell premium.
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