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Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment and Options Strategist
A two-week truce sent equities surging and crude crashing – but the options market is not calling this a resolution.
Yesterday’s announcement of a two-week suspension of US military operations against Iran triggered a sharp relief rally across equities. WTI crude posted its largest single-day decline in six years, and volatility indices fell – though the options market remains cautious, with VIX closing at 21.04 and OVX still elevated in absolute terms, reflecting a market that continues to price meaningful tail risk around a truce with a built-in expiry date.
All figures are April 8, 2026 closing prices.
VIX closed at 21.04, down 4.74 points on the ceasefire news. That decline reflects a meaningful fear unwind, but 21 is not low – the market is still pricing genuine uncertainty around a truce with a built-in expiry date.
The more telling read is in crude: OVX (CBOE Crude Oil Volatility Index) fell 14.88 points to 83.91 (-15.06%), moving almost in lockstep with the 16% spot decline. This is not how a typical large crude selloff behaves – normally a sharp drop drives IV higher as put demand surges. Here, the ceasefire resolved the directional uncertainty driving the war premium, so both spot and forward vol unwound simultaneously.
The practical implication: options buyers on both sides in crude – those holding puts for downside protection and those holding calls anticipating a further spike – saw their premium collapse in tandem. Premium sellers in energy, by contrast, had a strong session. With VIX at 21 and OVX still elevated in absolute terms, covered calls and cash-secured puts in energy remain the better-positioned structure heading into today.
The ceasefire rally leaves equities higher and vol lower – but VIX at 21 is not a complacency signal. The options market is pricing the two-week truce as a reprieve, not a resolution, and the expiry date on the deal is a hard backstop on how far fear can compress from here.
IMF–World Bank spring meetings begin today; any hawkish revision to global growth guidance, or the first sign of ceasefire wobble, is the most obvious near-term vol catalyst to watch.
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