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: Today’s Options Brief covers one of the most event-dense sessions of 2026 so far. A US-Iran interim peace agreement landed Sunday night, reopening the Strait of Hormuz (later this week) and sending equity futures higher while crude extends its decline. SpaceX options debut Tuesday, the Fed meets Wednesday, and the Iran deal formal signing falls on Friday - Juneteenth, when US markets are closed.
A US–Iran interim agreement reopens the Strait of Hormuz; SpaceX options trade for the first time Tuesday; the Federal Reserve meets Wednesday.
The US and Iran reached a 14-point interim agreement Sunday night, sending equity futures higher and extending crude oil’s decline into Monday morning. The deal, still unsigned as of this writing, targets the formal signing in Switzerland on 19 June (Juneteenth, when US markets are closed). Meanwhile, SpaceX (SPCX) options are expected to begin trading on Tuesday 16 June, making this one of the most closely watched options launches in years. The Federal Reserve’s rate decision and Chair Kevin Warsh’s first post-meeting press conference follow on Wednesday 17 June. Three binary events in five trading days, against a backdrop of VIX at 17.68 and SKEW at 142.60.
The US and Iran reached a 14-point interim agreement Sunday night to halt the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, with nearly 600 vessels currently waiting to transit, paving the way for 60 days of nuclear talks and a formal signing in Switzerland on 19 June. Equity futures are surging and crude is extending its losses overnight, though the deal remains unsigned and this week brings the Federal Reserve meeting (16–17 June) and Chair Kevin Warsh’s first post-meeting press conference as the next major binary events.
Source: Saxo platform / Bloomberg, Friday 12 June 2026
Based on end-of-day 12 June 2026 - yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.
VIX dropped 9.1% to close at 17.68, while VIX9D fell 16.5% to 17.26, a notable move that reflects both the Friday relief across tech and the market’s recalibration of near-term uncertainty. The S&P 500 implied move for the remaining days to the June 18 expiry stands at ±118 points, or ±1.59% (source: Saxo Market Quick Take, 15 June 2026), a tight window given everything queued up this week.
The VIX futures curve sits in mild contango: spot 17.68, front-month 18.95, second-month 20.20. The CBOE SKEW index (SKEW), which measures the premium investors pay for out-of-the-money downside protection relative to equivalent upside exposure, reads at 142.60, elevated despite the compression in spot vol. That divergence suggests the options market is not convinced this is a clean all-clear: traders are still paying a meaningful premium to hedge the tail even as the headline numbers look calmer.
On the single-name side, SpaceX (SPCX) options are expected to begin trading as early as tomorrow, Tuesday 16 June, making this one of the most anticipated options launches in years. With a market capitalisation estimated above $2 trillion and a stock that opened at $150 before peaking near $172 on its Nasdaq debut, the IV discovery phase, the period during which market makers price options without any historical data anchor, is likely to produce very wide bid-ask spreads and elevated initial implied volatility.
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.
When options begin trading on a newly listed stock with no prior options history, market makers face a fundamental data problem: there is no term structure, no skew history, and no realised-volatility baseline to anchor their pricing. The result is that initial implied volatility on SPCX options will almost certainly run substantially higher than what eventually becomes the “fair” level once the market accumulates a few weeks of data. This is IV discovery in practice, the market pricing in maximum uncertainty because it has nothing else to go on. Practically, this means bid-ask spreads will be wide, fills at mid will be difficult, and anyone paying the initial ask is paying a premium over what that volatility will likely settle at. Illustrative only - not a trade recommendation. The main risk is paying elevated premium for optionality that normalises quickly as market makers calibrate their models.
Current implied volatility, with spot VIX at 17.68, is below its long-term average, which means buying options protection is relatively inexpensive compared to typical conditions. Heading into a week that includes the Federal Reserve’s rate decision, Chair Warsh’s first press conference, and the expected formal Iran deal signing on 19 June (Juneteenth, when US markets are closed), this combination of low premium cost and high event density is the environment where purchasing downside protection tends to offer the most favourable cost-to-benefit ratio. A put spread on a broad index, for example, costs less in dollar terms when VIX is at 17 than when it is at 25, while the potential payout from a sharp move is no smaller. Illustrative only - not a trade recommendation. In our view, the current setup appears more favourable for purchasing downside protection before these catalysts than for selling premium into a quiet-looking but event-dense week. The maximum loss on a long put spread is the net premium paid, the full cost of protection if markets continue higher and the spread expires unexercised.
The Iran deal headline has done its work on energy and risk assets overnight. From here, the tests are more nuanced: whether the VIX contango flattens ahead of or after the FOMC decision, what the SPCX options debut signals about risk appetite for high-momentum names, and whether the formal signing ceremony on 19 June holds. That date falls on Juneteenth, when US markets are closed, adding a logistical wrinkle to the week’s timeline.
In our view, the current setup appears more favourable for purchasing downside protection before these catalysts than for selling premium into a quiet-looking but event-dense week.
The author does not hold positions in any of the instruments mentioned in this article.
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