Outrageous Predictions
Switzerland's Green Revolution: CHF 30 Billion Initiative by 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: SpaceX options begin trading today on a stock up 43% from its IPO in two sessions. No IV anchor. No open interest. No pricing history to ground the vol. That’s the backdrop for one of the more unusual options launches in recent memory.
The author does not hold positions in any of the instruments mentioned in this article.
Four things are running simultaneously today. The Bank of Japan delivered its expected 25-basis-point hike to 1.00%, taking its policy rate to a 31-year high; the dollar/yen exchange rate held steady above 160 as the move was fully priced. Australia’s RBA kept rates unchanged at 4.35%, warning that inflation remains too high. The Federal Reserve’s June policy meeting opens today, with Chair Kevin Warsh delivering his first post-decision press conference on Wednesday 17 June. And options on SpaceX (ticker: SPCX) begin trading on Nasdaq for the first time, with the stock having gained 19.6% in its second session on Monday, taking the cumulative move from the $135 IPO price to approximately $193. See the Market Quick Take - 16 June 2026 for the full macro context.
Monday’s session delivered a broad risk-on move. The S&P 500 closed at approximately 7,563, up +1.8% to a new record. The Nasdaq 100 added +3.1% to 30,549, led by AI and chip-linked names. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained +1.2% to 51,806, a record close. The iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) underperformed, rising just +0.6% to $294.77, reflecting the concentration of Monday’s gains in large-cap growth. The Stoxx 600 touched a record intraday high; the Nikkei surged +5.0% to 69,317; the Kospi gained +5.2%.
Gold snapped back sharply, reaching approximately $4,370 per ounce before stabilising above $4,300 in early Tuesday trading – following a 16% sell-off during the Middle East crisis. The 200-day moving average near $4,455 is the next resistance. Crude oil settled below $83, a three-month low, as markets price out the Strait of Hormuz disruption premium. Semiconductors (SMH) outperformed, closing up +4.6% to $648.47.
Data: Saxo platform as of 15 June 2026 close, Bloomberg and CBOE
Per Saxo Market Quick Take, 16 June 2026.
Market regime: Low vol bull. VIX at 16.1, S&P 500 above its 50-day moving average.
Based on end-of-day 15 June 2026 – yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.
VIX closed Monday at 16.14, but the term structure carries more information than the headline. VIX1D at 11.52 signals a calm immediate session; front-month VIX futures at 18.50 bake in material FOMC-week risk. SPX options are pricing approximately 36 points (0.48%) for today and 80 points (1.06%) through Thursday’s June 18 expiry (per Saxo Market Quick Take, 16 June 2026), implying a Thursday close range of roughly 7,483 to 7,643. The FOMC runs through Wednesday, the formal Iran accord text remains unreleased pending Friday’s signing in Switzerland, and the NYSE closure for Juneteenth concentrates the entire event window into four trading sessions.
The CBOE SKEW index at 142.60 is in the very elevated zone (above 140). The June 16 Quick Take puts a concrete number on it: 10-delta downside puts are priced approximately six volatility points above equivalent calls. That divergence – low near-term VIX, elevated tail demand – tells us the two-day equity rally has not persuaded participants to reduce their hedges. VXN at 25.80 adds a similar read in the Nasdaq complex.
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 – bull call spread. Illustrative only – not a trade recommendation. In a low-VIX, elevated-SKEW environment, puts are relatively expensive and calls are the more efficiently priced side of the market. A bull call spread – buying a closer-to-money call and selling a higher strike in the same expiry – reduces net premium and defines both the cost and the upside cap precisely. Works best with a specific upside level in mind. The maximum loss is the net debit paid for both legs.
Strategy insight – calendar spread into the FOMC window. Illustrative only – not a trade recommendation. With front-month VIX futures at 18.50 well above VIX1D at 11.52, there is a material differential between immediate and near-term implied vol. A calendar spread – short the near-dated leg, long the same strike further out – positions for near-dated vol to compress faster after Wednesday’s Fed decision while the back leg holds its value. The Juneteenth closure compresses the post-FOMC window, potentially amplifying that crush. The principal risk is a large directional move through the chosen strike after the announcement, which can produce a loss that exceeds the expected theta benefit.
Equities closed at record highs on Monday, but the options market’s internal read remains cautious: elevated SKEW, a six-point 10-delta put premium, and a steeply upward-sloping VIX term structure all point in the same direction. The week’s key events – FOMC, Iran accord signing, Juneteenth close, SPCX options debut – are compressed into four trading sessions. Precision over momentum.
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