Outrageous Predictions
A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: The S&P 500 closed at a new all-time high on Monday. The VIX, the market’s fear gauge, also rose, by nearly 5 percent on the same day. That combination is rare, and it points to something the headline number alone isn’t showing. In today’s Options Brief, we cover Nvidia’s ...
Nvidia’s PC chip launch lifted tech to fresh records while Iran’s Strait of Hormuz threat whipsawed oil, and options markets quietly added portfolio protection beneath the surface.
The first session of June delivered an all-time closing high for the S&P 500, but nine of eleven sectors declined on the day, leaving a narrow tech-led tape masking meaningful underlying divergence. VIX closed 4.77% higher alongside equities, a combination that signals demand for optionality rather than clean risk-on sentiment. The week’s macro calendar builds toward May nonfarm payrolls on Friday, with the June CPI release on 10 June and the FOMC meeting on 16 and 17 June providing the next structural anchors.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang unveiled the N1X processor at Computex 2026 in Taipei, an Arm-based chip co-developed with Microsoft and MediaTek and set to ship in Windows laptops this autumn, pushing large-cap tech to fresh records. Simultaneously, Iran threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz, sending crude oil surging 6 to 8 percent intraday before a Trump-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah reversed the move, with WTI settling below its prior close.
Based on end-of-day 1 June 2026 – yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.
Single-name flow leaned clearly bullish, with call accumulation concentrated in large-cap tech and e-commerce names, a positioning bias that left dealers mechanically buying underlying to hedge their short-call exposure.
Index and ETF confirmed opening flow diverged sharply toward long-dated put structures and broad downside ETF protection, pointing to meaningful portfolio hedging being added quietly beneath the record-setting tape.
VIX closed at 16.05, rising 4.77% on the day even as the S&P 500 edged to a new record, a divergence that signals underlying demand for optionality rather than a clean risk-on session. The VVIX (the volatility of the VIX itself, measuring how much the fear gauge is expected to move) climbed 6.44%, and the CBOE S&P 500 put/call ratio (PCSX, which measures protective put activity relative to bullish call positioning) jumped 19% to 1.05, corroborating the defensive index flow from yesterday.
The vol term structure is worth noting. The 9-day VIX (VIX9D) sits at 13.76, well below the 30-day spot at 16.05, with front-month VIX futures at 18.00 and second-month at 20.35. That steep upward slope means the market is pricing significantly more uncertainty at the 30-day-and-beyond horizon than at the immediate week, consistent with the CPI release on 10 June and the FOMC meeting on 16 and 17 June sitting just ahead on the calendar.
Strategy insight – How calendar spreads exploit a term structure gap. When near-dated implied vol is measurably lower than longer-dated implied vol, and when an identifiable macro catalyst sits further along the expiry curve, the conditions are theoretically suited to a calendar spread. The structure works by selling a short-dated at-the-money option while buying the same strike at a longer expiry. The short leg benefits from faster time decay in the relatively calm near-term period, while the long leg retains exposure to any vol expansion the macro event may bring. Today’s setup, with near-dated vol well below the 30-day implied and CPI and FOMC sitting ahead on the curve, illustrates the kind of term structure gap this structure is designed for. The maximum loss is the net premium paid for the back-month leg, capped at the initial cost of putting the spread on.
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 – The IV-versus-realised gap and what it means for protective structures. When implied volatility runs materially above realised volatility, the market is pricing in more forward movement than it has recently delivered. Here, the 30-day implied vol at 16.05 is running against a 20-day realised vol of 9.8%, a gap of roughly 65%. For a trader thinking about portfolio protection, that gap matters. It means the cost of buying downside optionality is elevated relative to what actual market movement has justified. A put spread on a broad index, rather than an outright put, is one way to reduce that cost by selling a further-out-of-the-money put against the long leg, capping the maximum gain on the hedge in exchange for a lower net premium. The maximum loss on such a structure is the net premium paid if markets continue higher and both legs expire unexercised.
Yesterday’s session printed a record but delivered a more ambiguous signal underneath, with narrow breadth, a VIX rising alongside equities, a put/call ratio above 1.0, and significant long-dated hedging flow at the index level. The vol term structure tells traders the market expects a quiet week before macro events take over from 10 June onward. The more actionable observation is that relatively cheap near-dated implied vol offers a cost-efficient window to position either side of those catalysts before the market prices them in more fully.
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