20260427 Options Brief  Chips surge Hormuz still shut  Header

Options Brief – Chips surge, Hormuz still shut – 27 April 2026

Options 10 minutes to read
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Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Summary:  The S&P 500 hit a fresh record Friday. Intel jumped nearly 24%. And the Strait of Hormuz is still closed. The options market is not entirely convinced this is the calm it looks like. Today’s Options Brief covers what the vol picture really says heading into one of the busiest weeks of the year: the Fed decision, Core PCE, and Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, and Apple all reporting


Options Brief – Chips surge, Hormuz still shut – 27 April 2026


Record highs in equities, oil still elevated, and options pricing that quietly says not everyone is convinced.

US equities pushed to fresh records on Friday, led by a sharp chip-sector rally, while oil stayed elevated as Iran peace talks stalled over the weekend. The options market is sending a more cautious signal beneath the surface: implied volatility remains elevated, downside skew is wide, and the week ahead is packed with binary events. Here is what the options picture looks like heading into this week.


Headline driver

US equities pushed to fresh records on Friday, led by a sharp chip-sector rally, while oil stayed elevated as Iran peace talks stalled over the weekend. For the full macro backdrop, see today’s Saxo Market Quick Take.


Market snapshot

  • S&P 500: closed at 7,165 (+0.80%), posting its fourth consecutive weekly gain
  • Nasdaq 100: closed at 27,304 (+1.95%), driven by AI-linked chip names – Intel jumped 23.6%, AMD gained 14.0%, Arm rose 14.8%
  • Stoxx Europe 600: fell 0.6% to 610.65 on Friday, losing 2.5% for the week as rising oil weighed on energy-importing economies
  • VIX (the market’s main fear gauge) closed at 18.71 (–3.11%); front-month VIX futures at 20.60 (–1.23%)

Options angle

The VIX closed at 18.71 on Friday – still relatively high for a market sitting at record levels. More telling is the gap between the VIX spot level and front-month VIX futures at 20.60: the options market is quietly pricing in more turbulence ahead, not a clean continuation of the rally. The SKEW index – which measures how much extra investors are paying for protection against sharp drops versus ordinary moves – sits at 139, well above its historical average. Elevated SKEW is a signal that professional money is genuinely concerned about tail risk, even as headline indices look calm.

That concern shows up directly in S&P 500 options pricing. Near-the-money puts (downside protection) are trading at an implied volatility – the market’s expectation of future price swings – of around 24–25%, compared with roughly 21% for equivalent calls. In plain terms: hedges cost more than upside bets right now. For the week ahead, options are implying a move of roughly ±120 points (about 1.7%) in the S&P 500 into Friday’s expiry – a wide range reflecting the Fed’s rate decision on Wednesday, Core PCE inflation data, and earnings from Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, and Apple all in the same five-day window.

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 – Selling covered calls rather than buying upside. When implied volatility is elevated, option premiums are inflated on both sides of the market. If you already hold shares in a stock reporting earnings this week, selling a covered call – an option that gives someone else the right to buy your shares at a higher price in exchange for a cash payment today – lets you collect that elevated premium as income. It reduces your effective cost if the stock dips, and the risk is simply that your shares get called away if the stock surges well past your strike. It works best when you expect a moderate move rather than a dramatic gap.

Strategy insight – Put spreads over outright puts for downside protection. The gap between put and call implied volatility makes straight put purchases expensive at the moment. A put spread – buying a put option at one strike while simultaneously selling a cheaper put at a lower strike – cuts the cost of that protection considerably. You still benefit if the market falls, just not beyond the lower strike you sold. In an environment where hedges are pricey but the risk of a sharp drop is real, a put spread gives you a more cost-efficient way to stay covered.


Conclusion

Markets are holding a fragile balance: equities at all-time highs, oil elevated on a still-closed Hormuz Strait, and options pricing that quietly signals not everyone expects the calm to last. This week’s Fed decision and concentrated Mag-7 earnings are the two clear catalysts – the kind of setup where implied volatility tends to stay elevated right up until both events pass, then deflate quickly. With that in mind, position sizing and cost of hedging matter more than picking a direction right now.


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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