Outrageous Predictions
Révolution Verte en Suisse : un projet de CHF 30 milliards d’ici 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Résumé: Apple fell 6.1% and Micron surged 15.7% in the same session as the AI cost chain split the technology sector - while the S&P 500 barely moved. With COR3M at a near-historic low of 9.90 and the VIX term structure in contango, today’s Options Brief explains what this dispersion environment means for portfolio hedging and which options structures are worth understanding right now.
Apple and Microsoft announced price increases across Macs, iPads, and Xbox hardware, citing rising memory chip costs driven by AI data centre demand, sending Apple down 6.1% and Microsoft down 3.5% while Micron surged 15.7% after its fiscal Q3 results beat expectations by a wide margin. See the Market Quick Take – 26 June 2026 for the full macro read.
Thursday 25 June 2026 close. Source: TradingView Options Brief watchlist / Saxo Market Quick Take, 26 June 2026.
The S&P 500 ended little changed at 7,357.49 (–0.01%) on Thursday, as Apple’s hardware repricing offset broad gains in semiconductors and industrials. The Nasdaq 100 gained 0.8% (Micron and Qualcomm more than offset Apple’s drag within the index), while the Dow rose 0.14% to 51,920.62, supported by Caterpillar and Deere. The SMH semiconductor ETF gained 2.9% as Micron’s earnings beat kept the AI memory theme intact. (Source: Saxo Market Quick Take, 26 June 2026.)
Europe was the contrasting read: the Stoxx 600 rose 0.8% to a fresh record close of 640.21, with the DAX adding 1.0% and the FTSE 100 up 0.7%. Bayer rallied 18.7% after a favourable US Supreme Court ruling on Roundup litigation. (Source: Saxo Market Quick Take, 26 June 2026.)
Gold held near $4,000 for a third session, on course for a fourth consecutive weekly loss under dollar strength and hawkish Fed signals. WTI crude extended its slide toward $69 as Hormuz transit normalised further.
May PCE came in at 0.45% month-on-month, slightly below the 0.50% consensus, pulling the 2-year Treasury yield down to approximately 4.09%. CME FedWatch currently prices around a 47% probability of a September Fed rate increase.
Market regime (in our view): Mixed, with rotation appearing underway – VIX closed at 18.89 on Thursday; SKEW at 139.89 reflects persistent tail-risk demand; COR3M at 9.90 points to a high-dispersion environment where individual stocks are moving on their own fundamentals rather than in lockstep with the index.
Source: SaxoTrader / CBOE / Bloomberg. Thursday 25 June 2026 close or Friday 26 June 2026 pre-market where noted.
Based on end-of-day 25 June 2026 – yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.
Single-name flow was defensive across mega-cap technology, with confirmed opening put structures in Apple, Microsoft, Meta, and Nvidia pointing to portfolio risk reduction, not a clean outright directional short; Micron was the notable exception, attracting opening call activity following the earnings beat, while semiconductor ETFs showed two-way flow with protective demand offset by upside call openings.
Index-level flow was put-heavy overall, with SPX puts dominating confirmed opening premium and several large complex structures suggesting bracket positioning for tail events rather than a one-way directional bet, while risk-off sector ETFs (healthcare and utilities) attracted call demand that read more like defensive rotation than crash protection.
VIX closed Thursday at 18.89 and sits in a term structure with real slope: VIX9D at 17.92 runs 2.4 points below VIX3M at 20.33, reflecting a market pricing meaningfully more uncertainty over the next three months than over the next two weeks. The front-month VIX futures contract at 19.55 traded below the spot VIX reading of 20.30 on Friday morning as the Asian selloff pushed spot higher. SKEW at 139.89 is elevated for this VIX level, which means the cost of far-OTM put protection has risen faster than the headline vol number implies. COR3M at 9.90 confirms what Thursday’s price action showed: Apple fell more than 6% and Micron gained more than 15% in the same session, with the index barely moving – that is what low implied correlation looks like in practice.
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 – Understanding the VIX term structure and calendar spreads. Illustrative only – not a trade recommendation. When short-dated implied volatility (measured by indices like VIX9D) runs noticeably below longer-dated implied volatility (measured by VIX3M or VIX6M), the vol surface is in contango – the market prices more risk in the future than it does immediately. A calendar spread involves selling a short-dated option and buying a longer-dated option at the same strike. The short leg decays faster, so the position collects the premium differential over time as long as the underlying stays near the strike. The setup is path-sensitive: it does not require the underlying to be still, but it does require it to stay within a range.
A gap move – either direction – pulls the long leg toward intrinsic value and removes the time-value advantage the structure was built on. With VIX9D at 17.92 and VIX3M at 20.33, the gap between near-term and medium-term implied vol is roughly 2.4 points, which sets the spread context for comparing the relative cost of near and further-dated options in the current environment. The main risk is a sharp or sustained move in the underlying that collapses the time-value differential between the two legs, resulting in a loss on both sides simultaneously.
Strategy insight – What low implied correlation means for portfolio hedging. Illustrative only – not a trade recommendation. The COR3M index measures the implied correlation between S&P 500 component stocks embedded in the options market. At 9.90 – the low end of its historical range – it signals that options traders are pricing a world where stocks move largely on their own fundamentals. Thursday’s session showed the effect directly: Apple fell more than 6% on a company-specific cost development while Micron gained more than 15% on its own earnings beat, and the index barely moved.
For investors using index-level options as a hedge against an equity portfolio, that creates a gap worth understanding: an index put covers a broad market decline, but when losses are concentrated in one or two individual positions moving against the index direction, the hedge covers less ground than the premium cost implies. When COR3M is this compressed, the question of whether to hedge at the index level or at the individual position level becomes more consequential than it is in a high-correlation environment where everything tends to move together. The main risk in acting on a correlation view is that correlations can increase sharply during broad risk-off events, which changes hedge effectiveness quickly and without warning.
Thursday’s price action traced a specific fault line in the AI story: Micron captured the demand side and ran 15.7%, Apple absorbed the cost and fell 6.1%, and the S&P 500 barely moved. By Friday morning the VIX had pushed to 20.30 on the Asian reversal, with Nikkei down 5% and Kospi down more than 8% as profit-taking hit semiconductor names. Options traders heading into the weekend are looking at a surface where the 9-day to 3-month vol gap is 2.4 points, SKEW is running expensive relative to spot, and COR3M at 9.90 means index hedges cover less ground than usual against concentrated single-stock risk – worth keeping in mind as weekly contracts expire today.
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