MARKET REGIME: LOW-VOLATILITY BULL | VIX 16.73 | TERM STRUCTURE: CONTANGO | SKEW: elevated (145.72) | FRONT-MONTH VIX FUTURES: 18.89 | AS OF ~06:00 CET
- Chip-led drop, breadth intact. The Nasdaq 100 fell 1.62% and semis (SMH) dropped 3.70%, but the equal-weight S&P 500 rose about 1.0% and defensives led, so the selling stayed concentrated rather than broad.
- Vol pop, not a vol regime. The VIX rose 6.76% to 16.73 yet held below 18, and the curve stayed in contango with the front-month future at 18.89, a repricing rather than stress.
- Fear priced in tech, not the index. VXN at 27.34 against a VIX of 16.73 (ratio about 1.64) and 3-month implied correlation near 8 point to a dispersion move led by chips and megacap tech.
Vol surface data: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, as of 17 July 2026, approx. 06:00 CET. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Headline driver
TSMC beat on earnings but lifted its 2026 capex plan to USD 60-64bn, and chips sold the news across Asia and the US while the rest of the market rotated rather than broke. Full macro rundown in Saxo’s Market Quick Take – When good news isn’t enough, 17 July 2026.
Market snapshot, Thursday 16 July close
- US (Thursday 16 July close): S&P 500 7,533.77 (-0.51%), Nasdaq 100 29,025.77 (-1.62%), Dow 52,558.27 (-0.20%), small caps (IWM) flat at 295.59 (-0.06%). The equal-weight S&P 500 rose about 1.0%, so breadth outran the cap-weighted tape. Apple +1.76% and Microsoft +1.38% held while Alphabet -4.44%, Meta -2.46% and Nvidia -2.40% led the drop.
- Sectors: semis (SMH) -3.70% and tech (XLK) -2.24% against health care (XLV) +2.22% and real estate (XLRE) +2.02%, a clean rotation out of chips into defensives. Costs and charges apply to ETF trades; see Saxo pricing for full details.
- Europe: roughly flat, Euro Stoxx 50 +0.29%, Stoxx 600 +0.16%, DAX -0.34%.
- Asia: the epicentre, Korea’s KOSPI -6.37% (circuit-breaker sidecars triggered) and Hang Seng Tech -4.04%.
- Commodities and rates: WTI USD 79.17 (+0.28%), gold -1.98%, US 10-year 4.55%, MOVE (bond vol) calm at 68.16.
- Market regime (rules-based read): Low-volatility bull, VIX 16.7, 20-day realised vol 11.1% (falling), S&P 500 about 0.98% above its 50-day moving average.
Source: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, 16 July 2026. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Options flow sentiment
Based on end-of-day 16 July, yesterday’s positioning and not today’s price action.
- Single-name flow leaned heavily to puts, but most of it was deep-in-the-money put ladders and rolls in the memory-chip names into today’s expiry rather than fresh downside bets, which left dealers close to delta-neutral there.
- Sector and ETF flow showed the cleaner opening trades as longer-dated index put hedges in the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq proxy, consistent with desks carrying portfolio protection into the late-July Fed meeting and the megacap earnings window rather than chasing the tape lower.
Volatility surface – 17 July 2026, approx. 06:00 CET
VIX term structure
- VIX spot 16.73 (+6.76%)
- VIX1D 12.72 (+33.75%) · VIX9D 13.98 (+15.92%), both jumped hard but sit below spot
- VIX3M 19.50 (+3.12%) · VIX6M 21.68 (+2.12%) · VIX1Y 23.41 (+1.21%), upward sloping
VIX futures
- Front-month VIX futures 18.89 (+2.06%), about 2.2 points above spot, contango intact
- Second-month VIX futures 19.75 (+1.55%), front-to-second ratio at 0.96
Skew and correlation
- CBOE SKEW 145.72 (-1.88%), tail hedging elevated but easing versus the 100-120 neutral zone
- COR3M 7.98 (+10.37%), low implied correlation even after the pop, a dispersion signal
- DSPX 46.53 (-0.51%), the S&P 500 dispersion index. Equity put/call ratio 0.82, index put/call 1.17
Cross-asset volatility
- VXN 27.34 (+6.59%), Nasdaq vol running about 1.64x the VIX
- GVZ (gold vol) 26.65 (+7.11%) · MOVE (bond vol) 68.16 (-0.47%) · VVIX 97.31 (+5.94%)
Source: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, 17 July 2026.
What the market is pricing
- In our view, near-term vol prices a nervous but orderly expiry rather than a panic. VIX1D at 12.72 and VIX9D at 13.98 were both bid up sharply, yet both sit under the 30-day VIX of 16.73. Options carry a high risk of rapid loss and are not suitable for every investor.
- The fear is priced in tech, not the broad market. VXN at 27.34 against a VIX of 16.73, a ratio near 1.64, places the risk squarely in chips and megacap tech.
- Tail hedging is held, not freshly grabbed. CBOE SKEW at 145.72 eased on the day, so downside protection stays elevated but is not climbing into the expiry.
- The curve prices a dispersion regime, not a directional break. Three-month implied correlation near 8, low even after a 10% pop, points to an index that may stay damped while single names diverge. See Saxo pricing for costs and applicable charges.
Today’s catalysts
The main event today is the US monthly options expiry, where dealer gamma hedging tends to concentrate into the close and can amplify intraday swings. The macro slate is light by comparison, and in our view the bigger forward markers are the cluster of megacap tech earnings due in late July and the FOMC decision on 28-29 July, both of which could decide whether the chip derate stays contained or broadens.
Tech selloff into monthly expiry
Today is the July monthly expiry, the third Friday, when a typical monthly settles on the order of USD 1-2 trillion in notional across US equity and index options. Dealer gamma hedging concentrates into the final hours, which can amplify intraday swings around heavily-owned strikes.
- The put walls in the memory names may pin less than their size suggests. The single-name put open interest in Micron, SanDisk and Oracle sits mostly deep in the money, where gamma is low, so its pull into the close could be limited despite the notional.
- The damage is concentrated, not broad, so far. The selling clustered in chips and Asia, with Korea’s KOSPI down 6.37% and circuit-breaker sidecars triggered, while US breadth stayed positive and Europe held roughly flat.
- In our view the derate could broaden through two channels. Megacap tech earnings in late July and the FOMC on 28-29 July are the US triggers; in Europe, the large semiconductor exporters (ASML, Infineon, BESI) that track the Philadelphia Semiconductor index are the transmission path. Options carry a high risk of rapid loss and are not suitable for every investor. See Saxo pricing for costs and applicable charges.
Expiry notional and gamma mechanics: CBOE, SpotGamma, 16-17 July 2026.
Conclusion
In our assessment the tape looked worse than it traded: a chip-led drop and a near-7% pop in the VIX, but with equal-weight names higher, defensives bid and Europe roughly flat, this reads as rotation rather than the start of a broad risk-off. Today’s monthly expiry may keep intraday moves choppy into the close as dealers hedge, even if the deep-in-the-money put walls offer little pinning pull. The signal to watch is whether the chip derate stays contained or could bleed into the index through megacap earnings and Europe’s semiconductor exporters. Options carry a high risk of rapid loss and are not suitable for every investor. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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.