20260625 Options Brief  Micron record gold selloff  Header

Options Brief - Micron record, gold selloff – 25 June 2026

Options 10 minutes to read
Koen Hoorelbeke
Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Summary:  Micron Technology reported fiscal Q3 EPS of $25.11 against a $20.20 consensus estimate and guided Q4 revenue roughly $7bn above analyst expectations, sending the stock up approx. 18% in pre-market trading. Today’s options brief covers the full volatility surface, the gamma dynamics at Micron’s $1,200 call wall, gold’s contested $4,000 zone, and two educational strategy frameworks for the session.


Options Brief - Micron record, gold selloff – 25 June 2026


Headline driver

Micron Technology reported fiscal Q3 EPS of $25.11 against a consensus of $20.20 after Wednesday’s close, then guided fiscal Q4 revenue to $50bn — approximately $7bn above the $42.9bn analyst estimate — sending the stock up roughly 18% in pre-market trading Thursday. Gold simultaneously broke below $4,000 per ounce for the first time since November, caught between a firming dollar, revised Federal Reserve rate expectations, and an easing in geopolitical risk following a US-Iran framework clarification.

For the broader macro context, see today’s Saxo Daily QuickTake.

Market snapshot – 25 June 2026, approx. 06:00 CET / updated 13:42 CET

Wednesday 25 June 2026 close and Thursday pre-market unless noted. Source: SaxoTrader/Bloomberg/CBOE, 25 June 2026.

The S&P 500 closed at 7,358 on Wednesday, its second consecutive lower session from the prior week’s highs. S&P 500 futures were trading at 7,461 (+0.44%) pre-market Thursday, with Nasdaq 100 futures up 1.67%, both lifted by Micron’s guidance and a parallel announcement from SK Hynix of a $29bn US listing.

Gold broke below $3,960 during Wednesday’s session — its first print below $4,000 since November — driven by a firming dollar, a shift in Fed rate expectations toward a September hike, and easing geopolitical risk. GVZ, the gold implied volatility index, surged 15.3% to 31.60 during Wednesday’s US session as the level broke. By the European session Thursday, gold futures had recovered to $4,005, leaving $4,000 as a contested zone heading into the US open.

May PCE is due at 14:30 CET and is the primary scheduled catalyst for the session.

Market regime: Transitioning — VIX 18.0, 20-day realised vol 16.7% (rising), S&P 500 +0.13% above its 50-day moving average. In our view, the current regime setup calls for smaller position sizes and defined-risk structures until the picture clarifies.


Volatility surface – 25 June 2026

Source: SaxoTrader / CBOE / Bloomberg. Wednesday 25 June 2026 close or pre-market unless noted.

VIX term structure

  • VIX1D: 16.68 — short-dated implied vol below the 30-day measure, consistent with a market that sees today’s risk as event-specific rather than systemic
  • VIX9D: 18.07 — unusually close to the 30-day reading; near-term and medium-term uncertainty are running at roughly the same level ahead of PCE
  • VIX (30-day): 18.63
  • VIX3M  ·  VIX6M  ·  VIX1Y: 20.37  ·  22.40  ·  23.85 — an intact upward slope, pricing steady elevation further out

VIX futures

  • Front-month (July): 18.90 — a +0.27-point premium to spot VIX; mild contango, not signalling acute stress
  • Second-month (August): 19.55 — contango of +0.65 points vs front-month; shallow and orderly

Skew & correlation

  • CBOE SKEW: 145.30 (prior session: approx. 142.6, approx. +1.9%) — tail protection demand remains elevated; put skew is already priced in
  • COR3M: 8.55 — cross-asset correlation near historical lows; macro is not moving names in the same direction, which supports stock-specific positioning
  • DSPX: 43.55 — single-stock dispersion elevated, consistent with the COR3M reading

Other vol measures

  • VVIX  ·  MOVE: 95.58 (–3.94%, prior session close)  ·  69.06 — VVIX declining suggests the market is not pricing an imminent vol-of-vol acceleration; rates vol remains contained
  • VXN: 30.18 — Nasdaq vol running well above spot VIX (VXN/VIX ratio: 1.62), reflecting the concentration of uncertainty in tech and semiconductors
  • GVZ: 31.60 (+15.3%) — gold implied vol surged during Wednesday’s US session as spot breached the $4,000 level; gold has since recovered to $4,005 in European trading Thursday

Options flow sentiment – 24 June 2026 EOD

Based on end-of-day 24 June 2026 — yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.

  • Single-name: Flow leaned bullish in semiconductors, with concentrated call activity in Micron and AMD and two-sided positioning in Nvidia, while metals saw a sharply defensive tone with heavy put flow in gold ETFs ahead of the eventual break below the $4,000 level.
  • Index & ETF: Index and ETF flow was put-dominated, with multi-tenor put rolling in S&P 500 products across the summer and autumn expirations, suggesting institutional holders were adding downside protection into the session rather than reducing exposure.

Options angle

VIX closed at 18.63 on Wednesday, with VIX9D at 18.07 — near-parity with the 30-day measure, a setup that typically signals the market has already partially priced near-term event risk rather than approaching it with complacency.

The most immediate options-specific question heading into Thursday is what happens to Micron’s gamma setup at the open. The stock’s pre-market move to approximately $1,244 has placed the heavy short-dated call concentration that existed around the $1,200 level deep in-the-money.

In gold, GVZ surged 15.3% to 31.60 during Wednesday’s US session — the standard repricing that occurs when a widely-watched round number fails. Gold futures have since recovered to $4,005 in European trading Thursday, which turns the $4,000 level into a contested zone rather than a clean break. The predominantly put-heavy positioning in GLD heading into Wednesday’s session confirms the options market was already skewed for a downside move.


Strategy insights

Two structures are relevant to today’s conditions: one for understanding post-earnings gamma dynamics, one for navigating elevated vol after a contested level breaks.

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.

Gamma dynamics in post-earnings gaps (illustrative)

Illustrative only — not a trade recommendation.

Strategy insight – Gamma dynamics in post-earnings gaps. When a stock gaps sharply higher after an earnings beat, a call wall — an area of concentrated call open interest just above the pre-earnings price — can shift its role once the underlying breaks through it. Before the gap, dealers who sold those calls were buying stock on the way up to stay delta-neutral, providing mechanical support. Once the stock gaps well above those strikes, the calls become deeply in-the-money, their delta approaches 1.0, and the gamma on those positions collapses: the mechanical buying that helped lift the stock through the wall largely disappears. A trader familiar with this dynamic might consider structuring upside participation via a call spread or a short-dated calendar spread rather than a simple long call, as post-gap implied volatility tends to be elevated and a spread reduces the premium paid. The main risk is that a continuation move carries the stock well beyond the short strike of a spread, capping participation above that level. Future outcomes are uncertain and may result in losses.

Elevated gold vol and the iron condor (illustrative)

Illustrative only — not a trade recommendation.

Strategy insight – Elevated gold vol and the iron condor. When an asset’s implied volatility spikes after a break of a significant technical level, options sell-premium strategies can become theoretically more attractive because the premium collected is higher and the breakeven distances widen. An iron condor — selling an out-of-the-money put and an out-of-the-money call while buying further-out wings for defined risk — collects more credit when IV is elevated at entry, giving the structure a wider range over which it may remain profitable. The structure is neutral on direction and may profit if the underlying settles between the four strikes at expiry. In a transitioning market regime where vol is rising but direction is unclear, defined-risk premium-selling structures of this type can offer a more controlled risk profile than outright directional positions. The main risk is that a further sustained move in one direction — continuation of the gold selloff or a sharp reversal — pushes the underlying outside the breakeven before expiry, resulting in the maximum defined loss.


Macro and events calendar

Today (25 June): US May PCE inflation at 14:30 CET — the Federal Reserve’s preferred price gauge and the primary scheduled vol event for this session
Today (25 June): Micron (MU) opens after roughly 18% pre-market gain — call wall dynamics at the $1,200 level worth monitoring intraday
Friday (27 June): Quarter-end; potential rebalancing flows across equity and fixed income


Conclusion

The setup heading into Thursday combines a large single-stock vol event in Micron with a commodity vol event in gold — the latter now in a contested state with futures having recovered to $4,005 after the session’s breach of $4,000, and GVZ still at 31.60. The old $1,200 call wall in Micron is worth watching intraday as dealer hedging pressure unwinds.

PCE at 14:30 CET remains the scheduled wildcard; the VIX9D running near parity with spot VIX suggests the market has partially priced a reaction, but a meaningful surprise in either direction can still move volatility from here. Defined-risk structures are, in our view, the most appropriate tool for the session given the Transitioning regime. Future outcomes are uncertain and may result in losses.

Today’s options brief published approximately 2:15 CET. Snapshot data from 06:00 CET, updated 13:42 CET unless noted.

This content is marketing material and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.
The Author is permitted to wait at least 24 hours from the time of the publication before they trade the instruments themselves.
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