2026-05-20 Options Brief - All eyes on NVDA - Header

Options Brief - All eyes on NVDA - 20 May 2026

Options 10 minutes to read
Koen Hoorelbeke
Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Summary:  Today’s Options Brief is an NVDA special. Nvidia reports Q1 FY27 after the close, and the options setup is worth a close read before 10pm (Brussels time). The 22 May expiry is priced at 85% implied vol against 45% for June - a 40-point earnings premium that collapses fast once results hit. Meanwhile, Tuesday’s options volume came in at less than ...


Options Brief – All eyes on NVDA – 20 May 2026


Nvidia reports after the close today as the bond market rout deepens and equities register a third consecutive losing session.

The 30-year US Treasury yield briefly touched 5.19% on Tuesday, its highest level since before the 2008 financial crisis, as Iran war-driven inflation and persistent fiscal concerns deepened the ongoing bond market rout. Equities posted a third straight losing session, setting up Wednesday with the macro backdrop still hostile and a single-stock event large enough to overshadow most of it: Nvidia reports fiscal Q1 FY27 results today after the close.


Market snapshot

  • S&P 500: 7,353.61, –0.67% (third consecutive down session)
  • Nasdaq 100: 28,818.84, –0.61%
  • Russell 2000: 2,747.07, –1.01% (small caps underperformed, consistent with rate sensitivity)
  • 30-year Treasury yield: closed at 5.176%, touching 5.19% intraday; 10-year Treasury yield: 4.659%
  • Gold: 4,462.90, –1.07% (unusual decline in an inflationary shock environment, pointing to broad deleveraging rather than selective hedging)
  • European indices: mixed to slightly positive (DAX +0.38%, Stoxx 600 +0.19%), diverging from the US rate-driven selloff
  • Market regime: NEUTRAL / CHOP — VIX 18.06, 20-day realised vol 10.8% (decreasing), S&P 500 +5.88% above its 50-day moving average

Options angle

VIX closed at 18.06 on Tuesday, up 1.35%, sitting at the lower boundary of the 18–25 neutral band. The VVIX (the volatility of the VIX itself, measuring how much the fear gauge is expected to move) rose 3.76% to 94.61. Front-month VIX futures settled at 20.50, in contango at roughly 245 basis points above spot, consistent with a market that is pricing protection rather than panic. The CBOE S&P 500 put/call ratio (PCSX, which measures protective put activity relative to bullish call activity) spiked 14.95% to 1.23, one of the sharpest single-session moves in weeks.

Nvidia’s options picture going into today’s print tells a quieter and more cautious story than the raw positioning numbers suggest. The 22 May weekly, which directly captures the post-earnings window, is pricing a 5.22% expected move ($11.53), placing fair value between $209.08 and $232.14. The implied volatility on that expiry is 85.24%, versus 45.20% for the June 18 monthly expiry, the first clearly non-event expiry. The roughly 40-percentage-point spread reflects the earnings premium concentrated in the event-dated contract. Once results are digested, most of that premium collapses, and the subsequent expiries revert toward the underlying’s normal course volatility.

What’s notable about Tuesday’s session is how subdued the participation was. Total options volume came in at 1,668,149 contracts, less than half the 30-day daily average of 3,744,047. That is the lightest single session in months on the trading day before a major earnings report. The most likely explanation is that the active positioning happened earlier, during the 13–15 May window when daily volumes were running above 5 million contracts. By Tuesday, the crowd appears to have largely stood aside, either already positioned or priced out by elevated short-dated implied volatility. The put/call volume ratio adds a subtle layer: it has drifted steadily from around 0.29–0.36 in early May to 0.48–0.49 over the past two days, suggesting a quiet but consistent accumulation of hedging alongside the dominant call-side positioning. Still call-heavy, but less so than two weeks ago.

The institutional flow from the past two weeks was broadly income-oriented rather than directionally bullish: the call-side was largely sold rather than bought, with upside capping activity concentrated in the 237.50–252.50 zone. Long-dated protective structures were building underneath. The net dealer setup is two-sided, with potential mechanical resistance above the sold-call zone and downside hedging pressure below.

Strategy insight – ATM calendar spread to harvest the IV crush differential. The approximately 40-percentage-point gap between the event expiry (22 May, 85.24% implied vol) and the first post-event monthly (June 18, 45.20% implied vol) makes an ATM calendar spread worth examining: selling a 22 May option at inflated event implied volatility while buying the same strike in a later expiry at the lower underlying vol. Once tonight’s results are absorbed, the short leg collapses far faster than the long leg, and the spread captures that differential. The trade works best when Nvidia stays near the sold strike after the event; the main risk is a large directional move away from the strike, which can cause both legs to lose value simultaneously.

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 – Call diagonal along the institutional resistance zone. A call diagonal extends the calendar idea with a directional element. Selling a 22 May call where call-selling flow has been concentrated, and buying a June expiry call at a lower strike retains long vega in the surviving leg while harvesting elevated event implied volatility on the short. The trade benefits from implied volatility crush on the short leg, has documented supply at the short strike, and keeps upside participation through the long leg if Nvidia gaps higher. The main risk is a sharp gap move through the short strike, which would require active management or closing the position before the short leg moves deep in-the-money.


Conclusion

The bond market is pricing a deteriorating fiscal and inflationary picture that equities have not fully absorbed. Three down sessions have not broken the broader bull, but the combination of a 30-year yield above 5.1%, a 10-year above 4.6%, and an energy shock with no clear resolution in sight is a genuine and growing headwind for equity valuations. Today the question narrows almost entirely to Nvidia. Analysts expect another beat-and-raise, the options market has priced a large event move, and the flow tape from the past two weeks suggests institutions have already positioned for multiple outcomes. What happens at 5pm ET will set the tone for the rest of the week.


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