2026-04-17 Option Brief - Nasdaq 12-day winning streak - Header

Options Brief – Nasdaq 12-day winning streak – 17 April 2026

Options 10 minutes to read
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Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Summary:  The Nasdaq 100 futures logged their longest winning streak since July 2009 on Thursday, before Netflix dropped nearly 10% pre-market on Friday after missing Q1 expectations.


Options Brief – Nasdaq 12-day winning streak – 17 April 2026


Twelve consecutive gains, VIX at 17.94, and a Netflix print waiting at the open – the vol compression trade is alive, but the TSMC lesson is fresh.

The Nasdaq logged its 12th consecutive daily gain on Thursday – the longest winning streak since July 2009 – as easing Middle East tensions and TSMC’s blowout Q1 results combined to sustain a broad risk-on tone. The S&P 500 closed at a new record of 7,041.28 and the VIX continued its recent downward trend to 17.94. Heading into April 17, Netflix Q1 results (reported after Thursday’s close) and the durability of the Iran de-escalation narrative are the two principal catalysts to position around.


Headline driver

Easing Middle East tensions and TSMC’s Q1 beat sustained the risk-on tone – with the Iran narrative remaining the key variable to watch.

Middle East tensions eased further on April 16. Trump struck an optimistic tone on Iran, saying the conflict was nearing its end, while a 10-day Israel–Lebanon ceasefire was separately confirmed – both reinforcing the de-escalation narrative that has been the dominant macro tailwind for equities since early April. Markets weighed these developments against uncertainty around the eventual timeline for any formal resolution, which partially capped the intraday advance and limited the S&P 500’s gain to +0.26%.

TSMC added a second pillar to the advance: Q1 net profit rose 58.3% year on year to a record level, with revenue of $35.9 billion confirming sustained AI-driven chip demand. TSM shares fell after the print, illustrating the sell-the-news dynamic that characterises heavily anticipated earnings events when expectations are already stretched. That dynamic is directly relevant to the Netflix print landing this morning.


Market snapshot – Thursday 16 April 2026 closes

Record closes across all four major US indices on April 16 – but the April 17 open brings Netflix down nearly 10% pre-market and WTI off more than 6%.

  • S&P 500: 7,041.28 (+0.26%) – new record closing high.
  • Nasdaq 100 futures: 26,487.25 (+0.12%) – new record; 12th consecutive daily gain, the longest winning streak since July 2009.
  • Russell 2000: ~2,718.54 (+0.18%) – new record closing high, confirming broad participation beyond large-cap tech.
  • WTI crude: ~$94.69 (+3.72%) – rose alongside the Middle East de-escalation narrative.
  • VIX: 17.94 – continuing its recent downward trend at Thursday’s close.

Early April 17 session – notable pre-market moves:

  • Netflix (NFLX): $97.32 pre-market (−$10.47, −9.71%) – Q1 results disappointed; move exceeds the ~6.54% priced expected range (see options angle).
  • WTI crude: ~$88.84 (−6.18%) – unwinding Thursday’s geopolitical risk premium.
  • VIX: ~18.18 pre-market – rising on the Netflix miss and oil move.

Market pulse: Thursday’s record closes met with a materially different open – Netflix and WTI are the two pressure points changing the session setup.


Options angle

VIX at 17.94, a live Netflix print, and a TSMC lesson in sell-the-news dynamics – three threads every options trader should hold simultaneously this morning.

VIX closed at 17.94 on Thursday, continuing its recent downward trend. That picture has already changed heading into the open: Netflix is down 9.71% in pre-market and WTI is off 6.18%, and VIX has moved to approximately 18.18 in early trading. The open will likely push it further.

The defining options event of this session is Netflix – and not in the way the market anticipated. Options priced an expected move of approximately 6.54% into the Q1 print (30-day IV ~40.3%); the actual pre-market move is −9.71% to $97.32. The stock has blown through the lower breakeven of any iron condor or short strangle positioned around the expected range. This is a realised-vol-exceeds-implied-vol event: the tail that was not priced has materialised. Any short-vol structure entered at Thursday’s close is now facing max loss on the put side unless hedged.

Combined with TSMC’s sell-the-news decline on Thursday, this is two consecutive major earnings prints this week where short vol was the losing setup. The common thread is that implied volatility underpriced the actual outcome – in TSMC’s case because guidance disappointed despite a record beat, in Netflix’s case because Q1 results fell short of already elevated expectations. The lesson for the remainder of this earnings season is not that short premium is structurally wrong, but that earnings IV in high-expectation names can and does underprice downside tail risk. Defined-risk structures with a known maximum loss are not optional – they are the minimum viable approach in this environment.

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.


Conclusion

Thursday’s close looked like a textbook short-premium setup: record highs, VIX at 17.94, a 12-day winning streak, and a de-escalation narrative with momentum. The April 17 open has changed the picture materially. Netflix is down nearly 10% pre-market – the actual move exceeds the expected range by more than three percentage points, meaning short-vol structures are facing losses. WTI is off more than 6%, unwinding the Iran-driven risk premium that helped drive Thursday’s gains. VIX is already moving higher.

For options traders heading into the open, the key takeaway is regime awareness. The underlying trend – record highs, de-escalation tailwind, compressed vol – has not reversed. But earnings season has now produced two consecutive prints (TSMC, Netflix) where the realised move exceeded the implied. That pattern should inform position sizing and structure choice for every remaining earnings event this cycle: defined risk is not a preference, it is a requirement.


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.
The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options.
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