Outrageous Predictions
A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: AI-related technology names led a sharp selloff on Tuesday as strong US economic data rekindled Federal Reserve rate hike fears and semiconductor stocks fell close to 5%. Today’s options brief covers the vol surface structure, the unusual VIX9D-to-spot gap, the options flow sentiment picture, and two educational strategy frameworks for navigating binary catalyst environments.
Equity markets closed sharply lower on Tuesday as AI-related technology names led a broad retreat. Strong US economic data rekindled concerns that the Federal Reserve has less room to cut than markets had assumed heading into this week. Semiconductor stocks took the sharpest hit, with the sector falling close to 5% in a single session.
The sector split told the real story. Defensives and financials held reasonably well while high-multiple technology names repriced sharply. The S&P 500 ended at 7,365.46, down 1.44%; the Nasdaq fell 2.2% to 25,587.04; the Dow Jones shed just 0.1%, finishing at 51,666.84. Source: Saxo platform / Bloomberg, 23 June 2026.
The Saxo Daily QuickTake for Wednesday 24 June covers the macro picture in full – see today’s QuickTake here.
Tuesday 23 June 2026 closing data unless noted. Source: Saxo platform / Bloomberg.
Source: CBOE / Bloomberg. Tuesday 23 June 2026 close unless noted.
Based on end-of-day 23 June 2026 – yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.
Spot VIX closed at 19.49 on Tuesday, up roughly 12.8% on the session. That reading alone sits in a zone where neither premium buyer nor seller has a structural edge. The more informative signal comes from the relationship between tenors.
VIX9D is at 16.29 – roughly three points below spot VIX. That is an unusual configuration. Normally the front end runs cheaper than 30-day implied; when VIX9D sits this far below the 30-day reading, it signals that traders are pricing near-term quiet while assigning more risk to the month-ahead window. The gap reflects the specific event architecture of the coming days – a data release Thursday, a weekend buffer – rather than a general vol regime shift.
VIX3M at 19.76 is essentially flat to spot, removing the typical forward slope from 30 days to 3 months. VIX6M at 22.15 and VIX1Y at 23.54 carry increasing risk premium in the longer tenors. Front-month July VIX futures at ~18.45 trade below spot – a backwardation signal. The market is pricing vol compression before the July 22 futures expiry.
CBOE SKEW at 143.14 is elevated, up 1.29 points from Monday. At these levels, the cost of OTM downside protection is meaningfully higher than equivalent upside, reflecting persistent demand for tail hedges even as the index sits only fractionally above its 50-day moving average.
Two structures are relevant to today’s conditions: one for capturing potential upside from a catalyst event when near-term vol appears underpriced, one for harvesting premium after a catalyst resolves. Both are educational illustrations only.
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.
Strategy insight – Long straddle. When near-term implied volatility trades at a significant discount to the 30-day measure and a scheduled macro event falls within that near-term window, the pricing gap may create a case for structures that profit when realised vol exceeds implied. A long straddle – buying both a call and a put at the same strike and expiry – may potentially benefit when the underlying moves more in aggregate than the total premium paid. With VIX9D at 16.29 pricing a narrower near-term move than the broader 30-day surface at 19.49 might appear to warrant, the near-term leg could be underpriced relative to the actual event outcome – though this is a contextual reading, not a certainty. In practice, outcomes depend heavily on the actual size and timing of the move; time decay accelerates sharply as near-term expiry approaches, and the entire premium paid is the maximum loss if the underlying stays flat through the event window.
Illustrative only. Not a trade recommendation.
Strategy insight – Iron condor. After a binary event resolves – a data release, a central bank statement, an earnings report – implied volatility typically compresses, sometimes sharply. An iron condor captures that compression by selling an OTM call spread and an OTM put spread simultaneously. The structure may potentially achieve maximum profit if the underlying stays within the range defined by the short strikes through expiry; it loses if the underlying moves beyond those strikes. Entry discipline is central to this structure: it makes most sense when implied vol is still elevated after the binary risk has resolved, giving the position a premium cushion to compress from. Risk is defined by the width of the spreads, but losses are real if the post-event move extends beyond the short strikes.
Today (24 June): Micron Technology earnings (after US market close) – the first hard datapoint on AI memory demand vs. narrative
Thursday (25 June): US May PCE inflation – the Federal Reserve’s preferred price gauge; the primary vol event for this week
Friday (27 June): Quarter-end; potential rebalancing flows across equity and fixed income
PCE data prints Thursday – the next scheduled vol event with the potential to either extend or begin resolving the current repricing. The S&P 500’s 50-day moving average is the key technical reference; at 0.35% above it, the index has minimal cushion if selling resumes.
In our view, the vol surface – flat from spot VIX to VIX3M, in backwardation at the front-month futures – currently appears consistent with a market that expects uncertainty to concentrate around specific events rather than persist broadly. That assessment is contingent on Thursday’s PCE print not delivering a significant upside surprise. Future outcomes are uncertain and may result in losses for any strategy undertaken in this environment.
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