Outrageous Predictions
Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026
Saxo Group
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: The week ending 19 June 2026 delivered a hawkish Fed debut under Chair Kevin Warsh and a semiconductor complex that hit record highs on Thursday, the two events pulling markets in opposite directions before chips won out. Today’s options brief reviews the vol surface, options flow sentiment, and two strategy insights for the week ahead, including Micron’s earnings on 24 June.
A hawkish Fed debut and a semiconductor record in the same week: what the options market made of it all.
The week that just closed paired a hawkish debut from Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh with a semiconductor rally that sent the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index to a record high on Thursday. For the full macro breakdown, see the Market Quick Take – 19 June 2026. US cash equity and bond markets are closed today for Juneteenth; this briefing reviews the week (16 to 18 June 2026) in place of the usual morning setup.
Thursday’s closes, 18 June 2026 (Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE).
Market regime (Saxo platform, 18 June 2026): Low Vol Bull, VIX 16.4, 20-day realised vol 16.1% (increasing), S&P 500 +1.63% above its 50-day moving average
Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE – 18 June 2026 close.
Based on end-of-day 18 June 2026, yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.
The VIX (the CBOE S&P 500 Volatility Index) settled Thursday at 16.40 (Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE), falling 11.1% as the semiconductor surge absorbed the post-FOMC anxiety. Short-end implied vol compressed sharply: the VIX9D (the 9-day forward measure) fell to 13.93 and the VIX1D (the single-session measure) to 15.68, both down more than 24% on Thursday, reflecting genuine calm about the immediate post-Juneteenth return. The picture shifts as you look further out. VIX3M at 19.57, VIX6M at 21.99, and VIX1Y at 23.85 form a steep upward slope that, in our view, encodes the market’s unresolved concerns about the Fed’s new rate path under Chair Warsh.
The DSPX (the CBOE S&P 500 Dispersion Index, which measures how divergently the index’s individual components are moving relative to the overall index) rose 4.0% on Thursday to 41.93, consistent with the week’s visible divergence: semiconductors gained over 5% while energy and gold declined. The low COR3M reading of 8.76 (a measure of 3-month S&P 500 member correlation) reinforces that picture. When sector-level divergence is this pronounced, implied volatility on individual names can behave very differently from index-level vol, a dynamic worth keeping in mind when assessing where options appear relatively cheap or expensive across the market.
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.
Illustrative only. Not a trade recommendation.
When a sector reaches a record high in the same week a key constituent faces a scheduled earnings announcement, the direction of the immediate post-announcement move can be genuinely uncertain: the record high suggests momentum and positive sentiment, yet it also raises the bar for an earnings beat to sustain the rally. A long strangle, buying an out-of-the-money call and an out-of-the-money put in the same expiry that captures the event, removes the need to predict direction and instead bets on the magnitude of the move. The current environment appears to support this structure: short-end implied vol is relatively contained (VIX9D at 13.93), which may make options somewhat more affordably priced heading into a near-term catalyst than in a higher-vol environment.
The structure may potentially generate a gain if the underlying moves sharply in either direction by expiry; it is best suited to situations where the expected magnitude of the move is high but the directional outcome is unclear, as is often the case ahead of earnings for a sector leader that has just rallied to new highs. The maximum loss is the total net premium paid for both options if the underlying barely moves and both legs expire worthless.
Illustrative only. Not a trade recommendation.
When a sector rallies to record highs on a specific mid-week catalyst, a relevant question heading into the following week is whether the move can accelerate further or whether it consolidates near those levels. A call ratio backspread addresses this by selling one at-the-money or near-the-money call and buying two (or more) further out-of-the-money calls in the same expiry; the net cost can be structured as a small credit or near-zero debit depending on strike selection, providing some cushion against time decay if the underlying stalls.
If the underlying accelerates sharply through the long call strikes, the two bought calls may potentially profit more than the one short call loses, generating an overall gain that grows with the move. If the underlying consolidates or moves modestly, the premium collected from the sold call may offset much of the cost of the bought calls, resulting in near-breakeven. The risk that warrants close attention is the zone between the short call strike and the long call strikes at expiry: if the underlying lands in that range, the loss on the sold leg may not be fully offset by the gains on the long calls, creating the maximum loss scenario for the structure.
The week ended with markets in an unusual equilibrium. The Federal Reserve has signalled clearly that the next move in rates appears more likely to be upward than downward, the US dollar is trading at multi-year highs, bond yields are at cycle highs, and yet equities closed Thursday at 7,500 on the S&P 500, driven by a semiconductor complex that just posted all-time highs. In our view, that divergence reflects the market’s current working thesis: AI-driven demand appears real and accelerating, and it seems, at least for now, capable of coexisting with a tighter monetary environment. The test comes this week, with a major memory chip maker reporting earnings on Wednesday amid the return from Juneteenth, and a VIX term structure that in our view prices the short-end calm as front-loaded; beyond the immediate horizon, implied uncertainty builds steadily through into 2027.
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