Outrageous Predictions
Die Grüne Revolution der Schweiz: 30 Milliarden Franken-Initiative bis 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Investment and Options Strategist
A two-week ceasefire in one of the year’s most disruptive geopolitical events just hit markets mid-session – and the options implications are immediate.
President Trump announced a two-week suspension of U.S. strikes on Iran on Wednesday, contingent on Iran reopening the Strait of Hormuz. The announcement triggered a violent reversal in crude oil – WTI fell approximately 18% intraday from above $115 to below $93 – while U.S. equity futures surged over 2%. The geopolitical risk premium that had accumulated over 26 trading days of conflict is now unwinding at speed.
The relief rally hit every major index – but the real story is an 18% oil collapse in a single session.
Market pulse: The dominant market move today is the oil reversal – everything else follows from that.
A sharp repricing in crude, a VIX holding near 24, and a potential shift in hedging demand across energy – all unfolding within a single session.
The VIX closed at 25.78 on Tuesday, reflecting moderate but still elevated risk. Volatility into the April 8 deadline had remained relatively contained, with front-end expiries holding firm across the term structure – consistent with binary event risk that is now partially resolving.
With crude falling ~18% following the ceasefire announcement, oil implied volatility (OVX) is likely undergoing a sharp intraday compression. Short premium positions in crude options that remained intact through the spike are positioned to benefit from this repricing. While a portion of the acute tail risk is being priced out, a two-week ceasefire does not constitute a durable resolution.
On individual energy names such as Exxon Mobil and Chevron, options markets are likely to adjust with softer call premiums and increased demand for downside protection, reflecting the reversal in crude. This suggests a potential steepening in put skew. From a tactical perspective, positioning shifts such as risk reversal unwinds or collar structures may become more relevant than outright directional selling, depending on how the underlying opens and stabilises.
On the index side, broad S&P 500 implied volatility has been trending lower week-over-week. However, with GDP and PCE scheduled for April 9 and CPI on April 10, equity volatility is unlikely to fully compress, as event risk is rotating rather than disappearing. Monitoring the VIX term structure, particularly around the April 10 expiry, remains key for signs of repricing.
The key question over the next 48 hours is whether equity implied volatility follows crude lower, or whether the macro data calendar keeps it supported. A stronger-than-expected CPI print could quickly reintroduce inflation concerns and stabilise or reprice equity volatility higher.
The Iran ceasefire removes the most acute tail risk priced into crude options and provides a near-term relief valve for equities – but it does not clean the slate. Tariffs (10% baseline plus country-specific surcharges) remain in place, and the calendar brings GDP and PCE on April 9 followed by CPI on April 10. There is enough macro event risk remaining to keep equity IV from collapsing entirely.
Heading into Thursday’s session, the vol opportunity is less about direction and more about navigating the reset: energy IV is the short, equity IV is the hold.
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