Outrageous Predictions
Carry trade unwind brings USD/JPY to 100 and Japan’s next asset bubble
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: Warsh’s first FOMC delivered a hawkish hold, with nine of eighteen members projecting at least one 2026 rate hike and the median year-end rate rising to 3.8%, sending the S&P 500 down 1.2% and the 2-year yield 16 basis points higher intraday. Today’s brief covers the full 15-measure volatility surface, yesterday’s EOD options flow sentiment, and two strategy insights.
The author does not hold positions in any of the instruments mentioned in this article.
The Federal Reserve’s June meeting delivered a hawkish hold. Chair Kevin Warsh, in his first FOMC press conference, kept the federal funds rate at 3.5–3.75%, but nine of eighteen committee members now project at least one rate hike in 2026, and the median year-end rate estimate moved to 3.8%. Warsh stripped the policy statement of all forward guidance, dissolved the dovish lean that had characterised communication under his predecessor, and announced five policy review task forces covering the Fed’s frameworks for inflation, growth, financial stability, the balance sheet, and global spillovers.
The market’s initial read was unambiguous: the S&P 500 fell 1.2%, the 2-year Treasury yield spiked 16 basis points intraday, and gold held near its recent levels as investors struggled to reconcile a hawkish Fed signal with an economy that, for now, shows no obvious signs of weakness. See the Federal Reserve press release, 17 June 2026 for the formal statement.
Tuesday’s FOMC session delivered the year’s sharpest single-day repricing of rate expectations. The S&P 500 closed at 7,420.11, down 1.2%, snapping a four-session record-breaking run. The Nasdaq 100 closed at 29,670.95; the Dow Jones Industrial Average shed approximately 500 points to settle at 51,498.16. The iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) closed at $289.88, down 0.75%, outperforming its large-cap peers despite the hawkish tone, a notable divergence possibly reflecting the domestic earnings leverage of smaller companies in a higher-rate environment.
The 10-year Treasury yield settled at 4.45%; the 2-year Treasury yield moved to 4.17% after spiking 16 basis points intraday as traders reassessed the rate path implied by the new dot plot. Gold closed at approximately $4,328 per troy ounce. Pre-market as of 06:00 CET: S&P 500 futures are up approximately 0.8% and Nasdaq 100 futures are up approximately 1.4%, with markets in partial recovery mode after digesting the Fed’s message overnight (source: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, 18 June 2026, approx. 06:00 CET).
Source: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE.
Market regime: In our view, the current setup continues to reflect a low-volatility bull environment, with VIX at 17.17 and the S&P 500 remaining above its 50-day moving average, though the hawkish FOMC outcome introduces meaningful uncertainty about whether that regime persists through the second half of 2026.
Based on end-of-day 17 June 2026; yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.
VIX closed Tuesday at 17.17 (previous close 16.41), a modest tick higher given the scope of the Fed-driven sell-off, but the term structure is the more informative read. VIX1D has spiked to 20.68, some 28.5% above the prior session, a move that reflects today’s monthly options expiration (moved from Friday June 19 to Thursday June 18 due to the Juneteenth public holiday) rather than a new fear regime. Beyond that expiration-driven distortion, the structure slopes steadily upward: VIX9D at 18.63, VIX3M at 20.62, and VIX1Y at 23.86, a shape suggesting the market is pricing rate-path uncertainty over the next twelve months, not immediate crash risk.
In our view, the more telling reads are in the cross-asset vol complex. MOVE (bond market implied vol) at 70.66 is up 5.0%, fully consistent with the 16-basis-point yield spike. GVZ (gold vol) has risen 13.0% to 28.45, elevated relative to recent sessions and reflecting gold’s ambiguous role in a hawkish, non-recessionary environment. COR3M at 10.55 (up 8.7%) remains in dispersion territory, which suggests the repricing is still being driven by individual instrument adjustments rather than correlated market-wide selling.
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 – put spread for the post-opex window. Illustrative only. Not a trade recommendation.
Today marks the June monthly options expiration, moved from Friday June 19 to Thursday June 18 due to the Juneteenth holiday. This rolls off a significant amount of dealer gamma from the market. In the sessions following expiration, dealers are no longer required to delta-hedge large existing positions, which can modestly reduce the market’s natural stabilising force. In the current environment, with VIX at 17, a hawkish Fed overhang, and October’s FOMC now widely discussed as a live meeting for a potential hike, a well-structured bear put spread can provide defined-cost downside exposure during this window.
A bear put spread involves buying a put at one strike and simultaneously selling a put at a lower strike in the same expiry, with the short leg reducing the net premium cost. In a low-VIX environment, put spreads tend to be more efficiently priced than outright long puts, as the premium differential between the two legs captures a portion of the elevated put skew. The maximum loss on this structure is limited to the net debit paid; the maximum gain is capped at the spread width minus the net debit, realised if the underlying falls to or below the short put strike at expiry.
Strategy insight – calendar spread for rate-path uncertainty. Illustrative only. Not a trade recommendation.
The VIX term structure today tells a specific story: VIX1D at 20.68 is elevated due to the monthly expiration and will compress sharply once today’s opex-related gamma rolls off. Meanwhile, VIX9D sits at 18.63 and front-month VIX futures at 18.68 embed persistent uncertainty about the October FOMC, now a genuinely live meeting for a potential rate hike. This structure, elevated short-dated vol due to a known event and persistent medium-dated vol due to ongoing policy uncertainty, is the environment in which calendar spreads tend to work well.
A calendar spread involves selling a near-dated option at a given strike and buying the same strike in a further-dated expiry. The position profits from the near-term leg decaying faster than the further-dated leg after the expiration event passes. In this context, selling the post-opex expiry and buying the same strike further out positions for an expected short-dated vol crush while maintaining medium-term exposure. This strategy carries meaningful risk if the underlying makes a large directional move through the chosen strike; in that scenario, the near and far legs converge in value, eliminating the calendar’s time-decay advantage and potentially producing a loss that exceeds the expected theta benefit.
Yesterday’s FOMC meeting confirmed a structural shift in Fed communication. Warsh’s removal of forward guidance and the dot plot’s hawkish recalibration, with nine of eighteen members now seeing a 2026 hike, means October is no longer a background event. In our view, today’s post-opex environment creates a brief window where protection is relatively efficiently priced and the medium-term risk landscape has materially changed. The vol compression expected later today as expiry-related gamma rolls off may represent the last point of low-cost entry before the next major repricing event.
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