20260713 Options Brief  Iran jolts the open earnings kick off  Header

Options Brief - Iran jolts the open, earnings kick off - 13 July 2026

Options 10 minutes to read

Summary:  A calm, semiconductor-led Friday close ran straight into a weekend Iran oil shock, with Brent near USD 80 and front-month VIX futures repricing to 17.55 even as spot VIX stayed near 15 on Friday's numbers. The brief looks at that spot-versus-futures split as earnings season kicks off, with the big banks reporting from Tuesday and ASML on Wednesday.


MARKET REGIME: LOW-VOL BULL  |  VIX 15.02  |  TERM STRUCTURE: CONTANGO  |  SKEW: ELEVATED (144.27)  |  FRONT-MONTH VIX FUTURES: 17.55

  • A calm Friday close ran straight into a weekend risk shock. US stocks finished Friday higher on semiconductor strength, but fresh US and Iran missile strikes over the weekend, and Tehran's claim that it has closed the Strait of Hormuz, pushed oil sharply higher and equity futures lower into Monday.
  • The volatility surface is split between Friday and this morning. Spot VIX closed Friday at 15.02, down 5.1%, with VIX9D down 10.8% to 11.15, yet front-month VIX futures have repriced up to 17.55, a widening premium to spot that shows where the weekend risk is landing.
  • Oil is doing the talking, and metals are paying for it. Brent trades near USD 80 and WTI is up around 4% on the Hormuz threat, while gold slipped to about 4,066 and silver fell 2.7% as a firmer dollar and higher yields offset the safe-haven bid.
  • Earnings season opens into this, not around it. The big banks report from Tuesday and ASML headlines Wednesday, arriving with single-stock implied volatility already well above index level and one-month implied correlation near a two-year low.

Vol surface data: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, as of 10 July 2026 close, approx. 06:00 CET, with front-month VIX futures live into Monday. Past performance is not indicative of future results.


Headline driver

Weekend US and Iran missile strikes, and Tehran's claim to have closed the Strait of Hormuz, lifted oil and knocked risk appetite as the new week opened, overshadowing a firmer Friday equity close.

Full macro rundown in Saxo's Market Quick Take - Iran strikes rattle markets, 13 July 2026.


Market snapshot, Friday 10 July 2026 close

  • US (Friday 10 July close): the S&P 500 rose about 0.4%, the Nasdaq 100 gained 0.3% to 29,825 and the Dow added roughly 150 points to 52,642, led by semiconductors. SK Hynix jumped 12.8% on its Nasdaq debut, Nvidia rose 4.0% to 210.96 and Meta gained 6.0% to 669.21.
  • Europe (Friday 10 July close): the Euro Stoxx 50 eased 0.3% to 6,270 and the Stoxx 600 finished broadly flat at 641, with AI-linked names the drag, ASML down 1.9% and Siemens Energy off 2.6%.
  • Asia and the Monday open: Asian equities fell as the weekend strikes, firmer oil and a stronger dollar stalled last week's recovery. Korea's Kospi led the regional retreat, down about 7.3% at the European morning read, and S&P 500 futures pointed lower into the open.
  • Commodities and rates (this morning): Brent trades near USD 80 and WTI is up about 4%, while gold slipped to around 4,066 and silver fell 2.7%. The US 2-year yield rose to a 15-month high near 4.23% and the 10-year firmed to 4.58%, and the dollar gained against every G10 peer, with USD/JPY near 162.
  • Market regime (rules-based read): Low-volatility bull, VIX 15.0, 20-day realised volatility 13.3% and stable, S&P 500 1.91% above its 50-day moving average. This is a multi-week signal and lags the intraday repricing now underway.
    Equity and vol data: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, 10 July 2026 close and Monday pre-market. Costs and charges apply to ETF trades; see Saxo pricing for full details. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Options flow sentiment

Based on end-of-day 10 July, Friday's positioning and not today's price action. This flow pre-dates the weekend Iran escalation, so it describes how desks were leaning into the close, not how the market is trading this morning.

  • Single-name flow into Friday's close leaned modestly bullish in the index and semiconductor complex, with call premium dominating in the broad market and chip names, though the largest individual prints were two-sided enough to keep conviction in check rather than signalling one-way demand.
  • Sector and ETF flow told a more defensive story underneath, with protection building in financials, biotech and crypto-linked names ahead of a heavy earnings and data week, and a quieter accumulation tone in longer-dated rates. Read together, desks entered the weekend positioned for a busy calendar, not for the geopolitical shock that has since reset the tone.

Volatility surface - 13 July 2026, approx. 06:00 CET

VIX term structure

  • VIX spot 15.02 (-5.24%)
  • VIX1D 9.90 (-2.27%) · VIX9D 11.15 (-10.80%)
  • VIX3M 18.57 (-2.21%) · VIX6M 21.09 (-1.08%) · VIX1Y 22.97 (-0.52%), the curve is upward-sloping and steep at the short end, with the very front measures back near multi-week lows even as the futures curve repriced higher overnight

VIX futures

  • Front-month VIX futures 17.55 (+3.51%), trading at a clear premium to Friday's spot close after jumping this morning on the weekend Iran headlines
  • Second-month VIX futures 18.61 (+1.70%), front-to-second ratio at 0.945, a widening gap between a calm cash VIX and a more cautious futures market

Skew and correlation

  • CBOE SKEW 144.27 (-0.28%), the premium paid for out-of-the-money downside protection, still elevated versus its 100 to 120 neutral zone
  • COR3M 7.19 (-4.13%), a very low three-month implied correlation
  • DSPX 46.60 (-1.71%), the S&P 500 dispersion index. Equity put/call ratio eased to 0.81, index put/call little changed at 1.01

Cross-asset volatility

  • OVX 44.67 (-2.87%) as of Friday and likely to firm on this morning's move in oil
  • GVZ 23.95 (-5.45%) · VXSLV 46.60 (-4.41%) · MOVE 69.55 (+0.95%)
  • VXN 24.89 (-7.51%) · RVX 19.98 (-4.13%) · VXD 13.56 (-2.87%) · VVIX 87.28 (-1.69%)

Source: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, 10 July 2026 close.


What the market is pricing

  • In our view, the front of the curve is where the story sits. A cash VIX near 15 alongside front-month futures at 17.55 tells you the market treated Friday as calm but is pricing the weekend escalation into the near term. Options carry a high risk of rapid loss and are not suitable for every investor.
  • The geopolitical premium is concentrated in oil, not yet in equities. Brent near USD 80 and a firmer dollar have done the repricing so far, while the equity vol surface as of Friday still looked benign, a gap that tends not to persist once a cash session opens.
  • Skew stayed sticky through the vol cool. SKEW at 144.27 remains well above its neutral zone even as spot vol fell, which points to standing demand for downside convexity heading into an event-heavy week.
  • Dispersion is unusually wide into earnings. With COR3M near 7.2, close to a two-year low, and single-stock implied volatility running hot versus a mid-teens index VIX, the market is pricing large idiosyncratic moves around individual results rather than one broad index swing.
  • Tuesday's CPI is the week's pivot. The inflation print lands into an oil spike and a hawkish rates backdrop, and the option-implied weekly range, derived from at-the-money option pricing rather than a forecast, is the reference to watch for how much the market is willing to pay for that risk. See Saxo pricing for costs and applicable charges.

Today's catalysts

The macro calendar is light before the week accelerates. OPEC's Monthly Oil Market Report is due during the day and will be read closely given the Hormuz threat, and the US Treasury Budget for June lands this evening CET. Progressive and Fastenal are the only notable US reporters today, with the real earnings weight arriving from Tuesday. Fed Chair Warsh's first congressional testimony and Tuesday's June CPI are the events that will set the tone for the rest of the week.


This week: earnings season kicks off

Friday's higher close was the last quiet session before a much busier stretch. The big banks open the season on Tuesday, with JPMorgan, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo and Citigroup all reporting, followed by ASML, Morgan Stanley, BlackRock and Johnson & Johnson on Wednesday and Netflix, UnitedHealth and GE Aerospace on Thursday. It is a broad opening slate that spans financials, semiconductors, healthcare and media in the space of four sessions.

  • The vol dispersion is wide, and that gap has not historically lasted. Index VIX sits near 15 while single-stock implied volatility runs far hotter into the reporting window, and one-month implied correlation is near a two-year low, a level that has reversed sharply before. When correlation snaps back, index volatility can rise even without a fresh macro shock.
  • Priced moves and actual moves often diverge into earnings. The options market's implied move for a name can under- or overprice what actually happens after the print, a gap that shows up directly in straddle, strangle and iron condor pricing around results. Options carry a high risk of rapid loss and are not suitable for every investor. See Saxo pricing for costs and applicable charges.
  • The banks set the macro tone, ASML sets the AI tone. Tuesday's bank results frame the health of the consumer and credit into a higher-yield backdrop, while Wednesday's ASML print is the read-across for the semiconductor demand story that carried Friday's rally. Both carry large single-name options open interest and tend to move their sectors.
  • Geopolitics is now layered on top of the earnings calendar. A live oil shock into the first week of results raises the odds of two-sided moves, since a strong print can be overwhelmed by a macro headline and a weak one cushioned by a risk-on reversal. That combination is exactly what keeps implied volatility elevated in individual names even when the index looks calm.

Earnings calendar: Saxo Market Quick Take, 13 July 2026.


Conclusion

In our assessment, today is a study in two clocks running at different speeds. Friday's cash session closed calm and semiconductor-led, and the rules-based regime still reads low-volatility bull, but the weekend Iran escalation has already repriced oil, the dollar and the front of the VIX curve before equities have had their say.

That leaves a market where index volatility looks cheap on Friday's numbers while the near-term futures and single-stock vol tell a more cautious story into CPI and the first bank earnings. Cheaper index premium is not a signal on its own, and options carry a high risk of rapid loss that is not suitable for every investor.

Read into the week, the setup favours the idiosyncratic over the index, individual earnings moves over one broad market swing. Past performance is not indicative of future results.


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