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Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: Thursday’s equity session looked quiet. But the options market told a different story: the S&P 500 put/call ratio surged nearly 58% in a single session, while the VIX actually declined. That kind of divergence between falling implied volatility and rising protective put demand is unusual, and it is worth understanding what it signals. Today’s Options Brief covers the PCSX spike and ...
A mild equity pullback on the surface – a more telling story in the options flow underneath.
US equities pulled back Thursday as markets awaited Iran’s formal response to a US peace framework. The headline moves were modest, but the options market told a more cautious story: the S&P 500 put/call ratio surged nearly 58% in a single session while the VIX actually declined, small caps absorbed disproportionate selling, and the CBOE SKEW index confirmed elevated professional demand for downside protection. Here is what the options picture looks like heading into Friday.
US equities pulled back Thursday as the Iran diplomatic clock kept ticking: the US formally presented Tehran with a one-page memorandum of understanding to end hostilities, re-open the Strait of Hormuz, and begin 30 days of nuclear negotiations – but markets moved lower as investors awaited Iran’s formal response. Heading into Friday’s session, S&P 500 futures are pointing modestly higher, suggesting some revival of deal optimism overnight.
VIX (the market’s main fear gauge, measuring the implied volatility of S&P 500 options) closed at 17.08 on Thursday – actually declining 1.78% on a day when equities sold off, staying within the Low Vol Bull regime. The more telling signal was the CBOE S&P 500 put/call ratio (PCSX), which measures how much protective put trading is occurring relative to bullish call activity; it surged 57.89% in a single session to 1.20, a level at which put volume is running meaningfully ahead of calls. What makes this divergence unusual is that implied volatility was actually falling, making puts cheaper, and yet traders were buying more of them anyway – a sign that the hedging activity is driven by conviction rather than panic. The CBOE SKEW index, which measures the premium investors pay for out-of-the-money downside protection relative to equivalent upside exposure, ticked up 0.51% to 136.11, well above its long-run average, confirming that professional positioning is leaning toward protection even as headline vol metrics look calm. Front-month VIX futures at 19.00 sit nearly two full points above spot, a contango structure that reflects the market’s expectation of rising turbulence in coming weeks rather than immediate stress. The VVIX – the volatility of the VIX itself, measuring how much the fear gauge is expected to move – closed at 93.61, broadly stable, suggesting no imminent panic event but equally no sign of complacency setting in.
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 spreads exploit the current skew asymmetry. With SKEW elevated at 136.11, puts are priced at a meaningful premium to equivalent calls, which leaves calls looking relatively cheap by comparison. This asymmetry makes call spreads – buying a call at one strike, selling a call at a higher strike to partially offset the cost – an unusually cost-efficient way to express a bullish view in the current environment. Selling premium outright is tempting when vol is low, but when realised volatility sits at 10.5% and implied vol can spike sharply without warning, the thin premiums collected do not adequately compensate for the potential losses if volatility reverts quickly. A defined-risk call spread lets you participate in continued upside while keeping the maximum loss fixed at the premium paid, with no exposure to a sudden volatility expansion.
Strategy insight – IWM puts offer timely protection at a reasonable cost. The iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) closely tracks the Russell 2000 index, which fell 1.63% on Thursday – four times the S&P 500’s loss – as rate-sensitive small-cap companies continue to face structural headwinds in a high-rate refinancing environment. For traders with IWM exposure, or those looking to express a bearish small-cap view, buying IWM puts while VIX is in the low 17s and realised volatility is declining offers a strategically sensible entry point. Implied volatility in IWM tends to track VIX direction, meaning current low-vol conditions deliver cheaper insurance than you would find after a volatility event has already occurred. A bearish risk reversal on IWM – buying a put and selling a call against it – can finance that downside coverage at near-zero net cost by collecting the richly priced put skew, and pairing it with a long large-cap position converts the trade into a relative-value expression of small-cap underperformance rather than a pure directional bet on the overall market.
Thursday’s session was mild on the surface – equities barely moved – but the options market told a more cautious story underneath: protective put buying surged to a ratio above 1.20 while VIX actually fell, and small caps absorbed disproportionate selling for the fourth consecutive week. The Low Vol Bull regime is intact, and Friday’s futures are modestly green as Iran deal optimism reasserts itself overnight. Given that puts are expensive and calls are relatively cheap right now, call spreads are the more structurally sound way to express a continued bullish view, while IWM puts offer a cost-effective hedge for those with small-cap exposure at risk. Iran’s formal response to the US peace framework this weekend remains the key binary event – and the elevated put/call ratio suggests the options market is already leaning toward caution before the answer arrives.
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