Outrageous Predictions
A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: MU rallied 8.70% Thursday while the options market spent the session buying protection, not calls. Here is what the IV structure and put/call flow reveal heading into Wednesday's earnings.
The vol surface says quiet week. The options market on one name disagrees.
Micron reports earnings Wednesday after the close. While the VIX at 16.78 signals broad calm, Micron’s options are pricing a 12% move over four trading days – and the flow data from Thursday points in the opposite direction to the price action. This edition examines what the options structure reveals and two educational concepts worth understanding before the event.
The vol surface says this should be a quiet week. The earnings calendar disagrees. Micron reports Wednesday after the close, and the options market has priced that name for a 12% move over four days while the VIX sits at 16.78. Iran provides background noise, with weekend ceasefire signals pulling in opposite directions before the foreign minister cited “major progress” in negotiations, pulling Brent back from a weekend spike above $82 toward the low $79s. Full macro context: Market Quick Take - 22 June 2026
Thursday’s session was semiconductor-led. SK Hynix’s HBM4E announcement carried the VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) +5.76% and the Nasdaq 100 to 30,406 (+2.48%). South Korea’s EWY added +6.89%. The S&P 500 closed at 7,500.57 (+1.08%), the Dow lagged at +0.14%. Micron closed at $1,133.99 (+8.70%), with post-market reaching $1,151.80.
The options surface on MU heading into Wednesday is not what you would expect from a stock that just rallied 8.70%. Implied volatility closed Thursday at 103.31%, 97th percentile by IV rank. The comparison that matters: Micron’s historical realized volatility is running at 110.75%. Options are priced below what the stock has actually been moving. That is an unusual pre-earnings setup – normally IV trades above realized vol heading into a binary event.
The June 26 weekly expiry, four trading days out and covering the post-earnings print, prices in an expected move of $139 (12.26%), implied range roughly $995 to $1,273. The term structure shows where the event premium sits: June 26 is priced at 121.25% IV, the July 17 monthly at 103.53%. That 18-point gap tends to collapse sharply once the print is out – though the timing and extent of IV compression can vary.
The flow data from Thursday points the other way. The put/call volume ratio on the June 26 expiry reached 2.43 on a day when the stock gained 8.70% – meaning more than twice as much put volume as call volume on what should have been a bullish session. Total options volume hit 1,187,685 contracts, 39% above the 30-day average. The net delta imbalance was negative, which points to institutional hedging of existing long positions, not fresh directional call buying.
The put/call OI ratio stands at 1.85, a put-heavy structure built up over time. At the money, put IV runs about 2 points above equivalent calls – the $1,135 put is at 122.20%, the $1,135 call at 120.07%. That spread is what downside protection costs in this chain, consistent with SKEW at 146.72. Call open interest concentrates near the top of the expected range, where dealer delta-hedging creates structural selling pressure well within the implied move.
European markets ended Friday marginally lower (Stoxx 600 and DAX each –0.2%) on thin Juneteenth-holiday volumes. Monday opens with US futures slightly positive, the 10-year yield at 4.489%, USD/JPY at 161.59, carrying over from last week’s hawkish FOMC under Chair Warsh.
Source: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE.
Market regime: Low-volatility bull, in our view. VIX 16.78, 20-day realized vol approximately 16%, S&P 500 trading above its 50-day moving average.
The VIX at 16.78 says the broad market is calm. VIX9D at 13.93 says it is even calmer in the very near term. The nuance is in VXN at 26.31 and SKEW at 146.72: the concern that exists is concentrated in tech, not distributed across markets. Low broad vol, elevated tech vol, steep skew – that combination points to a market that is calm at the index level but specifically hedged in a pocket of names.
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 – When the IV/HV relationship inverts before earnings. Illustrative only – not a trade recommendation. Micron’s current options surface is a good example of a pre-earnings scenario that runs counter to the usual warning. Normally, IV has run up into the event and options are expensive – vol buyers are paying above what the stock has been moving. That logic requires IV to be above historical realized vol. When it is not – when a stock has actually been moving faster than its options currently imply – the starting conditions are different. IV crush after the event tends to happen; once the uncertainty resolves, the event premium typically compresses quickly regardless of where it started. But the move the underlying needs to deliver to break even is closer to its own recent history rather than some elevated implied level it has to overcome first. The maximum loss on any long premium strategy remains the full premium paid if the stock barely moves after the event.
Strategy insight – How to stay in the game without picking a number. Illustrative only – not a trade recommendation. The heavy put buying in MU options on a day when the stock gained 8.70% illustrates an approach worth understanding. Ahead of a binary event, the choice is not just between a directional bet and staying flat. A hedged directional structure – owning the position while also owning the put – defines the maximum loss before the event while keeping the upside open. In options-only form, a bull call spread does the same: you express a directional view, the maximum loss is fixed at entry, and you know it before the event resolves. That matters most exactly when it is hardest to hold a position: the night before the print. The maximum loss on a bull call spread is the net debit paid if the underlying stays below the lower strike at expiration.
MU added 8.70% on Thursday but the options market spent most of that session buying protection, not directional calls. The expected range of $995 to $1,273 frames what Wednesday evening needs to deliver: below $995 challenges the AI memory trade; above $1,273 requires a print that clears expectations that were already elevated going in. That is a wide range of outcomes, and the options market has hedged it more carefully than the weekly chart suggests.
The author does not hold positions in any of the instruments mentioned in this article. Illustrative only. Not a trade recommendation. Options trading involves significant risk and is not suitable for all investors. Past market conditions are not a guide to future outcomes. Source: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE.
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