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Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: Despite a renewed geopolitical shock in the Strait of Hormuz, markets have so far treated the move as noise rather than a full regime shift. The article argues that options traders should focus less on broad fear and more on what the tape, volatility curve and earnings backdrop are actually saying.
The Strait of Hormuz closed again over the weekend — and the market’s response tells you which narrative is actually in the driving seat.
Iran’s IRGC reversed the Friday Hormuz opening on Saturday, ships came under fire, and the US Navy seized an Iranian vessel on Sunday. Technically, the ceasefire expires tomorrow. Yet equity futures opened lower, pared most of their losses, and the VIX spot — at 19.91 — approached but did not cross the 20 level that often triggers systematic vol-buying flows. The market is treating the Hormuz reversal as elevated background noise, not a new crisis. The reason is not hard to find: earnings season and the AI theme have reasserted themselves as the dominant drivers, and second-round US–Iran talks remain under discussion following the breakdown of the Islamabad negotiations. This week, for options traders, the opportunity is more likely to come from the earnings calendar than from the geopolitical headlines — unless the situation escalates materially.
Hormuz closes again, but the market is choosing to focus on earnings — and the price action supports that choice.
The weekend sequence is well-documented: Iran’s IRGC reversed the Friday Hormuz opening on Saturday, citing the US naval blockade of Iranian ports as a ceasefire violation. Ships attempting transit came under fire. On Sunday, the USS Spruance seized and disabled the Iranian-flagged M/V Touska after a six-hour standoff. By any headline measure, this is an escalation. And yet the equity market’s reaction function has been measured: futures opened lower on Sunday evening, pared much of those losses by Monday’s early session, and VIX spot held at 19.91 – approaching but not crossing the psychologically significant 20 level.
Two factors explain the resilience. First, the diplomatic channel is not closed: second-round US–Iran talks are under discussion following the breakdown of the Islamabad negotiations in mid-April, and Pakistan continues to seek a window to re-engage both sides. Second — and arguably more important for equity markets — the AI and large-cap tech earnings narrative has been running on its own momentum. Investors have repeatedly demonstrated over the past two weeks that they are willing to look through geopolitical noise as long as the earnings picture holds. This morning, that continues to be their working assumption.
Friday 17 April official closes and Monday 20 April early-session picture.
Market pulse: The divergence between the severity of the weekend headlines and the modesty of Monday’s equity selloff is the signal. The market is re-pricing a known risk while keeping one eye firmly on the earnings calendar.
VIX spot at 19.91, equity tape recovering: the options opportunity this week is centred more on selective event risk than on broad geopolitical hedging.
VIX spot at 19.91 with a recovering equity tape is an instructive configuration: implied volatility has repriced modestly higher, but the market is not running for the exits. The 20 level matters not because it is a mechanical trigger but because systematic vol-buying flows often activate at or above it; the fact that spot has held below it suggests the institutional re-pricing remains measured. Separately, front-month VIX futures at 21.030 indicate the futures curve is already embedding above-20 uncertainty for near-term expiries, which is a useful input for calendar spread positioning, where front-month and back-month IV are diverging.
The primary volatility opportunity this week is in single-name earnings and other stock-specific catalysts rather than in index-level geopolitical protection. Tesla stands out as the main large-cap reporting event on this week’s calendar, while much of the broader AI and mega-cap technology earnings slate still sits ahead in the coming weeks. That timing matters: the near-term setup is less about trading a concentrated wave of imminent AI earnings and more about being selective with event premium where the catalyst is actually close. With the market’s attention drifting back toward fundamentals and away from the war premium, targeted single-name volatility setups look more actionable than broad macro hedges right now. Tesla is scheduled to report after the close on 22 April 2026; Alphabet and Microsoft are scheduled for 29 April 2026, and AMD for 5 May 2026.
Energy remains the one area where geopolitical positioning is still relevant. With WTI retracing to around $89.94 and OVX re-expanding, the energy volatility story is genuinely two-sided: a diplomatic breakthrough could send oil back toward $83, while a breakdown in ceasefire momentum could push it toward $95-$100. A long straddle or strangle on f.e. XLE still captures that binary cleanly, but entry at current elevated IV levels should be weighed carefully. The move has already happened, so patience for a volatility pullback before entering may be warranted.
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 market is telling you something pre-market: the Hormuz reversal is a known risk being re-priced, not a new crisis being discovered. Futures have pared a lot of their losses, the AI bid is reasserting itself, and earnings season is reclaiming the wheel. The correct response for an options trader is not to restructure the whole book around a geopolitical tail risk that the market itself is treating as background noise — it is to size that exposure appropriately, keep it defined-risk, and direct the majority of analytical attention toward where the vol opportunity is actually sharpest this week, which is the earnings calendar. The Hormuz situation warrants a position, not a posture.
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