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Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: Markets staged a sharp risk-on reversal Thursday as President Trump cancelled planned US military strikes on Iran and signalled a deal could come as early as this weekend - but Tehran has yet to confirm anything, and that gap between price and reality is where today's Options Brief begins. VIX fell 12.5% on Thursday but ...
A sharp risk-on reversal on unconfirmed Iran ceasefire optimism – with the vol structure holding onto its escape hatch ahead of FOMC.
President Trump cancelled planned US military strikes on Iran Thursday and said a formal deal could be signed as soon as this weekend, triggering a sharp cross-asset risk-on reversal; Tehran has yet to confirm any agreement, keeping headline risk live. Full coverage: Market Quick Take - 12 June 2026
The S&P 500 closed Thursday up 1.75% to 7,394, the Nasdaq 100 gained 3.29% to 29,446, the Dow rose 1.86% to 50,854, and the Russell 2000 added 3.02% to 2,921. The rally extended Friday, with European indices adding another 1.8–2.0% in early trading (DAX at 24,699 this morning) and Asian markets surging, led by Korea’s Kospi (+4.6%). US index futures point to further gains at the open: S&P 500 futures +0.63%, Nasdaq 100 futures +0.55%.
WTI crude fell 4.25% to $83.98 and Brent 4.27% to $86.52 as markets began pricing in a Strait of Hormuz supply normalisation scenario. Gold surged 3.20% to $4,246, silver gained 5.57%, and the 10-year Treasury yield declined approximately 12 basis points to close near 4.45% (2-year: 4.05%) as Iran-related inflation risk premiums retreated.
Data: Saxo Market Quick Take / Bloomberg / CBOE, as of 11–12 June 2026.
The VIX closed Thursday at 19.44, a 12.5% single-session drop. Screens Friday morning show a further dip to 18.54, suggesting the calming is extending into today’s session. The near end of the term structure carries a notable hump: VIX1D at 21.09 and VIX9D at 20.66 both sit above spot VIX, a near-term inversion that reflects concentrated event risk from the still-unconfirmed Iran deal and next week’s FOMC meeting (June 16–17). Front-month VIX futures trade at 20.10 and the second month at 21.00; the normal contango shape resumes from there, with VIX3M at 21.42 and VIX6M at 23.14.
Additional volatility readings: SKEW at 142.98 (essentially unchanged, no directional tail signal), COR3M down 15.8% to 11.54 (correlation collapse consistent with a dispersion-friendly rally), DSPX edging up 2.9% to 40.82 (some tail hedging remaining in place despite the risk-on tone), VVIX at 100.63 (down 7.0%, vol-of-vol easing but not collapsed). OVX (crude vol) fell 6.6% to 56.30 as the energy risk premium deflated; GVZ (gold vol) dropped 12.0% to 28.33 after bullion’s sharp move; MOVE (bond vol) declined 6.1% to 69.45 as yields reversed.
Market regime (in our view): Neutral/Chop. VIX 18.6, 20-day realised vol 15.3% (increasing), S&P 500 +2.26% above its 50-day moving average.
Based on end-of-day 11 June 2026 – yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.
Single-name flow leaned constructive in energy equities and large-cap financials, where confirmed opening call demand pointed to upside participation and selective long-duration accumulation; dealers hedging those exposures by buying underlying shares would have provided incremental support to both sectors during the session.
Broad-market index and ETF flow carried a two-sided but defensive undertone, with opening put demand across major equity index instruments accompanied by far-out-of-the-money VIX tail calls suggesting portfolio managers were building event protection ahead of next week’s Federal Reserve meeting, while concurrent put selling in the same instruments kept the net positioning measured rather than outright bearish.
VIX closed Thursday at 19.44 and has drifted further toward 18.54 in early Friday trading, with the decline reflecting the Iran relief trade rather than any fundamental change in the underlying vol regime. The more telling structural feature is the near-term inversion: VIX1D at 21.09 sits above VIX9D at 20.66, which in turn sits above spot VIX, a configuration that typically signals concentrated event gamma in the very near term rather than a durable vol reset. The VIX3M-to-6M range of 21.42–23.14 carries a more normal contango shape, suggesting the market is broadly comfortable with the medium-term backdrop provided the Iran situation finds a resolution. Gold implied vol (GVZ) declined 12% following Thursday’s $130 bullion rally, a reminder that sharp directional moves in safe havens frequently compress the associated implied volatility even as the underlying moves in their favour.
Strategy insight – Jade lizard to harvest elevated put skew. Illustrative only – not a trade recommendation. When SKEW is reading in the low-to-mid 140s, out-of-the-money puts carry a material implied volatility premium over equivalent-distance calls – a structural imbalance a jade lizard is specifically designed to exploit. The structure combines a short out-of-the-money put with a short out-of-the-money call spread: the put leg captures the elevated downside premium, while the call spread caps any loss on the upside to the width of the spread, effectively eliminating the open-ended risk that a short strangle carries on that side. The position may benefit from time decay across both legs and from a normalisation of put skew over the holding period. The risks are equally concrete: below the short put strike, the position carries full downside exposure with no further protection, and losses grow as the underlying continues to fall – the call spread hedge does nothing on the downside. If implied volatility expands sharply after entry, both short legs lose value simultaneously, and there is no long option in the structure to offset that move. The risk-reward of the jade lizard is therefore inherently asymmetric: the upside is bounded by the premium collected, while the downside has no defined floor beyond the short put strike.
Strategy insight – Long straddle positioned for pre-event vol expansion. Illustrative only – not a trade recommendation. In the days ahead of a major scheduled central bank announcement, nearby implied volatility tends to be bid as market participants accumulate event protection – a pattern that means entering a long straddle several sessions before the event can potentially allow the position to participate in that vol expansion, independent of the eventual directional outcome. On the benefit side, the structure profits from a large move in either direction and may also gain from the vol expansion itself, even before the event occurs. The risks deserve equal weight: a long straddle bleeds theta every day it is held, so a position entered too early relative to the vol expansion loses time value faster than it builds vega gains; if the geopolitical headline resolves before the FOMC premium builds, implied vol could compress rather than expand, pushing both legs lower simultaneously; and if vol expands into the event but the underlying’s actual move at the announcement falls short of the combined breakeven, the full premium paid is lost. With Iran and FOMC premiums currently stacked in the near-term, entry timing matters as much as the structure itself.
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.
The Iran ceasefire trade is real enough for markets to price a strong risk-on rally, but not confirmed enough to fully discharge the geopolitical risk premium, and that gap is the defining tension heading into today’s session. With VIX1D still elevated above spot, the FOMC five days away, and Tehran yet to endorse any formal agreement, the vol structure is pricing optimism with an escape hatch. In our view, when the market is already priced for a resolution, the asymmetric risk appears to have shifted: the cost of being wrong about escalation has risen, and that is worth keeping in mind as the week closes.
Author disclosure: Koen Hoorelbeke does not hold positions in any of the instruments mentioned in this article at the time of publication.
Sources: Market Quick Take - 12 June 2026 & Bloomberg (12 June 2026, ~11:45 CET)
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