Outrageous Predictions
Révolution Verte en Suisse : un projet de CHF 30 milliards d’ici 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Investment and Options Strategist
Résumé: Wednesday was one of those sessions where three macro stories landed at exactly the same time. Four Mag 7 companies reported. The Fed voted 8-4 with three hawkish dissents. And Trump rejected Iran’s Hormuz proposal overnight - sending oil up another 3% into Thursday’s open. The post-earnings split is sharp.
Three macro drivers land simultaneously: earnings diverge, the Fed turns, and oil charges higher.
Wednesday delivered four major technology earnings reports, a more hawkish-than-expected Federal Reserve decision, and President Trump’s overnight rejection of Iran’s Hormuz reopening proposal. Heading into Thursday’s session, equity markets face a simultaneous repricing of technology valuations, monetary policy expectations, and energy costs – with volatility signals across asset classes pointing in the same direction.
Wednesday delivered three macro events in quick succession: four Mag 7 companies – Alphabet, Meta, Amazon, and Microsoft – reported Q1 results after the close; the Federal Reserve held rates at 3.5%–3.75% in a more divided-than-expected 8–4 vote, with three officials pushing to remove the easing bias from the statement entirely; and President Trump rejected Iran’s latest proposal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz overnight, extending the naval blockade and sending oil prices higher again into Thursday’s open. Heading into today’s session, the market faces a simultaneous repricing of technology, rates, and energy.
The S&P 500 closed Wednesday essentially flat at 7,138, as investors largely held back ahead of the evening’s earnings avalanche. The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) settled at 17.83 – a deceptively calm reading given what arrived after the close. WTI crude settled at approximately $106.88 and Brent near $110.44, already elevated after nine weeks of the US naval blockade of Iranian ports, before Trump’s overnight rejection of Iran’s Hormuz proposal added a further 3% to both benchmarks. This morning (30 April, approximately 07:00 CET) WTI trades at $109.78 (+2.7%) and Brent at $113.68 (+2.9%).
On the earnings front, the post-close picture was sharply split. Alphabet gained 6.5% in extended trading after reporting Q1 revenue of $109.9 billion (+22% year-on-year) and Google Cloud revenue of $20.0 billion – 63% higher than a year ago and well above the $18.4 billion consensus. Amazon gained 2.2% after its AWS cloud division grew 28% year-on-year, its fastest pace since mid-2022. Microsoft slipped 2.0% despite guiding Azure growth of approximately 40% next quarter, with investors focusing on the still-modest trajectory of Copilot adoption. Meta fell 7.2% after raising full-year capital expenditure guidance to $125–145 billion, with CEO Mark Zuckerberg unable to articulate a specific monetisation path for the escalating spend.
The VIX closed Wednesday at 17.83, but the overnight picture is considerably more stressed. Spot VIX is now at 18.81 (+5.5% from the prior session close), and the 1-day VIX (VIX1D) has spiked 55.7% to 18.15 – signalling that the market is bracing for sharp intraday moves as technology positions are repriced around post-earnings gaps. The volatility-of-volatility index (VVIX) stands at 96.02 (+5.5%) and the SKEW index at 141.88 (+2.7%), both elevated, reflecting continued demand for tail protection. Oil volatility (OVX) is at 75.96 (+7.7%), and bond volatility (MOVE) has jumped 8.2% to 74.33 – an unusually broad expansion across multiple asset classes simultaneously.
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 – Vol crush after an earnings gap: why the resolution of uncertainty matters more than the size of the move.
When a stock makes a large move on earnings, the implied volatility (the options market’s expectation of future price swings, priced into premiums) that had been building ahead of the announcement typically collapses – a phenomenon known as “vol crush.” The key educational point is that vol crush is driven not by whether the move is up or down, but by whether the primary source of uncertainty has been removed.
Alphabet’s +6.5% after-hours gap is a textbook example: the result is unambiguous, the cloud growth story is confirmed, the binary event is resolved.
Meta’s –7.2% gap is conceptually different – the stock moved sharply, but the underlying question (whether $125–145 billion in annual capital expenditure will eventually generate meaningful returns) remains entirely open.
Options theory treats these two situations very differently: a resolved-uncertainty environment typically sees implied volatility fall faster and further than an unresolved one, which is why the same gap size in two different names can produce very different volatility trajectories in the days that follow.
Strategy insight – What the OVX/VIX divergence tells us about downside protection on the S&P 500.
A notable gap has opened between oil volatility (OVX at 75.96, +7.7%) and equity volatility (VIX at 18.81, +5.5%). This divergence matters educationally because energy cost shocks have historically fed into corporate earnings – for industrial, transportation, and consumer-facing companies in particular – with a lag of several weeks to months, meaning equity markets may not yet be fully pricing that transmission.
Options theory recognises three broad responses to this kind of setup, each with a different logic.
Today’s session opens with three macro drivers running simultaneously: technology earnings that are net constructive but split sharply at the single-stock level; a Federal Reserve more openly divided than at any point in recent years; and oil making fresh highs on a blockade that Trump has signalled he intends to sustain. Equity volatility, at 18.81, still looks contained relative to what oil and bond volatility are pricing – and that gap between the VIX and the broader cross-asset stress picture is arguably the most telling observation heading into the session. The VIX1D spike of 55.7% is a useful reminder that the calm in the headline number does not always reflect what is happening underneath.
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