Outrageous Predictions
A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: The Nasdaq 100 added +2.08%. AMD surged 13%+ after a blowout Q1 beat. European indices outperformed, with the Euro Stoxx 50 adding 2.68% and the European banking sector the day’s strongest performer at +3.80%. And the VIX? Up 0.06%. That vol-indifference signal - markets at records, fear gauge unmoved - is actually the most interesting read of the session
The AI trade roared back in a single session — and the volatility market barely noticed.
AMD reported blowout Q1 2026 results after Tuesday’s close, triggering a broad AI-linked risk rally that carried both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 to fresh all-time closing records on Wednesday. Super Micro Computer surged 18% and Corning jumped 17% on a Nvidia partnership, making it a clean sweep for the semiconductor space. Yet the VIX closed essentially unchanged at 17.39 — a vol-indifference signal that confirmed the market regime as LOW VOL BULL and pointed decisively toward short-premium strategies as the structural trade of the session. This brief covers what happened, what the vol market is saying, and how to position for Thursday’s follow-through.
AMD reported Q1 2026 revenue of $10.25 billion, up 38% year-on-year, with data centre revenue reaching $5.8 billion — a 57% increase — driven by surging demand for EPYC server CPUs and Instinct AI GPUs. Q2 guidance of $11.2 billion came in well ahead of expectations. The results sparked a broad AI-sector rally on Wednesday, with AMD shares surging more than 13%, Super Micro Computer adding 18%, and Corning jumping 17% on a newly announced Nvidia partnership. Progress on US–Iran peace negotiations added a geopolitical risk-on tailwind, amplifying the session’s gains across US and European markets alike.
Wednesday 6 May 2026 closes:
Thursday 7 May 2026 — pre-market, ~06:30 CET:
Market regime: LOW VOL BULL — VIX 17.4, 20-day realised volatility 10.2% (declining), S&P 500 +7.59% above its 50-day moving average. The regime has been continuously confirmed LOW VOL BULL across several sessions, reinforcing the structural edge for short-premium strategies.
VIX closed Wednesday at 17.39, up just 0.06% against a 1.46% S&P 500 advance to a record — a textbook vol-indifference reading. The 20-day realised volatility has compressed further to 10.2% annualised and continues to trend lower, deepening the gap between implied and realised movement that structurally favours premium sellers. The short end of the vol term structure adds nuance: the 1-day VIX (VIX1D) rose 8.47% to 11.66 while the 9-day measure (VIX9D) edged up 0.82% to 14.76 — Thursday’s session carries slightly elevated near-term event pricing, though both readings remain at historically suppressed absolute levels. Front-month VIX futures settled at 19.200 (–0.66%), a 1.81-point premium above spot, with the second-month contract at 20.550 (–0.71%), maintaining a mild but persistent contango that generates roll decay for short-volatility positions over time.
VVIX — the implied volatility of VIX options, a measure of “vol of vol” — eased 1.64% to 93.70, well below the 100 threshold that typically marks a transition to stressed conditions, confirming that vol sellers are relaxed. SKEW retreated 2.39% to 135.42, but remains historically elevated and above the 130 level that typically marks active institutional tail-protection demand — a reminder that some participants are quietly maintaining deep out-of-the-money put coverage even as broader sentiment turns emphatically bullish. Options sentiment flipped hard across every category in a single session: the equity put/call ratio (PCC) collapsed 21.74% to 0.629, the index put/call ratio (PCCI) fell 33.66% to 0.707, the single-stock put/call ratio (PCSX) dropped 34.48% to 0.76, and the equity ETF put/call ratio (PCCE) declined 13.27% to 0.557. The breadth of this synchronised rotation — all four measures moving together by significant margins — makes this a high-conviction sentiment flip, not noise.
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 – post-earnings vol crush: the covered call window on AMD. When a stock reports blowout earnings and gaps sharply higher, implied volatility — the market’s expectation of future price swings, priced into options — typically collapses in the sessions immediately following. This is the vol crush: before earnings, options carry a premium for the uncertainty of the result; once the result is known, that uncertainty premium evaporates rapidly. AMD surged more than 13% on Wednesday, and its implied volatility will now decay quickly as market-makers reset their models to a post-event baseline.
Selling a covered call — writing an out-of-the-money call against a long stock position — captures that residual elevated premium before it disappears. The timing window is narrow: it is most effective in the first one to two sessions after the gap, before normalisation is complete. Strike selection is the key variable: too close to the current price and the position risks being called away if AMD extends its move; too far out and the premium collected is negligible. For traders without an existing AMD position, selling a call spread to cap the risk can achieve a similar outcome with defined downside. The live risk is straightforward — if AMD keeps running on continued AI momentum, the upside is capped at the short strike, and the position underperforms a clean long.
Strategy insight – iron condors in the current low-vol bull environment. The iron condor — simultaneously selling an out-of-the-money call spread and an out-of-the-money put spread on the same underlying — is a premium-collection strategy that profits when the market stays within a defined range. Its structural edge comes from the gap between implied and realised volatility: when the market prices in more movement than it actually delivers, option sellers collect premium the market never needs to pay out. That gap is wide right now: the VIX sits at 17.39 while 20-day realised volatility is running at just 10.2% and declining — options are pricing roughly 70% more future movement than the market has recently delivered. The VIX futures contango (front-month at 19.200, 1.81 points above spot) adds a further structural tailwind through the daily roll of futures contracts back toward spot.
In a regime confirmed as LOW VOL BULL across multiple consecutive sessions, this configuration represents a clean iron condor setup. One adjustment worth making given the current SKEW reading of 135.42: size the put-side wing slightly wider than the call side. Elevated SKEW means the market is paying up for downside protection, making the put spread proportionally richer to sell — but also signalling that the tail risk on that side is being taken more seriously by institutional participants. The strategy breaks down on a sudden regime shift: a VIX spike above 25 or a sharp gap lower would stress the put spread directly, so a predetermined exit level on the short put spread is as important as the entry itself.
Wednesday’s session delivered a clean, unambiguous LOW VOL BULL reinforcement: records on both sides of the Atlantic, vol indifference despite a 1.46% S&P 500 advance, put/call ratios collapsing in near-unison across all four measures, and the VIX futures term structure intact in contango. Heading into Thursday, futures suggest continuation without acceleration — the overnight session is digesting rather than extending the move. The slightly elevated VIX1D (11.66, +8.47%) flags that some near-term event uncertainty is priced for today’s session specifically, worth monitoring as the day develops. Absent a fresh catalyst, short premium structures remain the regime-appropriate trade — with SKEW at 135.42 as the standing reminder to keep defined risk on the put side.
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