VIX 16.13 | TERM: CONTANGO | SKEW: ELEVATED (145.74) | VIX FUTURES: 17.50 | REGIME: LOW-VOL BULL
- The volatility bid moved to oil, not equities. Fresh US airstrikes on Iran and a revoked Iranian oil-export waiver lifted crude 2.6%, and oil's volatility index OVX jumped 18% to 47.59 while spot VIX only ticked up to 16.13, pushing the OVX-to-VIX ratio to about 2.95.
- Chips led a broad, not isolated, selloff. The S&P 500 fell 0.45% to 7,503.86 and the Nasdaq 100 dropped 1.8% after Samsung's strong-but-not-strong-enough results, with Intel down 9.7% and AMD down 6.5%, and the weakness spread to industrials.
- Rates volatility woke up too. MOVE firmed 6.8% to 70.25 as the 10-year yield pushed to 4.55% and the 30-year to 5.06%, both the highest since May, ahead of today's 10-year note auction and FOMC minutes.
Headline driver
Geopolitics displaced the AI-valuation debate overnight: US strikes on Iranian targets and the revocation of Iran's oil-export waiver, in response to attacks on shipping near the Strait of Hormuz, lifted crude and revived risk-off just as a Samsung-led chip selloff dragged equities lower into Tuesday's close. Full macro rundown in Saxo's Market Quick Take – Geopolitics regain control, 8 July 2026.
Market snapshot, Tuesday 7 July 2026 close
- US (Tuesday 7 July close): the S&P 500 fell 0.45% to 7,503.86, the Nasdaq 100 dropped 1.8% and the Dow eased 0.3% to 52,930. Semiconductors led the decline, the SMH tracker down 3.8%, with Intel off 9.7% and AMD off 6.5%, and the weakness spread beyond tech to Caterpillar and Deere.
- Energy bucked the tape: WTI crude rose 2.6% to about $72.3 and Brent moved back above $76, lifting the energy sector ETF XLE 2.8% while the broad market fell.
- Rates and FX: the US 10-year yield climbed to 4.55% and the 30-year to 5.06%, both highs since May. The dollar was firmer, USDJPY above 162 and EURUSD holding around 1.141. Gold held near $4,135 despite the higher-yield backdrop. Overnight, US index futures steadied close to flat.
- Market regime (rules based read): Low-volatility bull, VIX 16.1, 20-day realised volatility 14.5% and easing, S&P 500 1.26% above its 50-day moving average.
Source: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, 8 July 2026.
Options flow sentiment
Based on end-of-day 7 July, yesterday's positioning and not today's price action.
- Single-name flow was two-sided rather than directional, with the heaviest large-cap chip call interest bought and sold in near-equal size, so market makers were left close to flat rather than chasing the selloff.
- Index and ETF flow leaned toward premium selling, S&P calls repeatedly sold to open and the larger downside puts mostly crossing at mid, a range-friendly, income-oriented posture rather than fresh downside hedging.
Volatility surface – 8 July 2026, approx. 06:00 CET
VIX term structure
- VIX spot 16.13 (+3.60%)
- VIX1D 10.66 (+22.11%) · VIX9D 13.42 (+8.93%)
- VIX3M 19.01 (+1.22%) · VIX6M 21.38 (+0.66%) · VIX1Y 23.13 (+0.35%), upward-sloping, the front end re-inflating from Monday's collapse but still low in absolute terms
VIX futures
- Front-month VIX futures 17.50 (-0.30%), a premium to spot that keeps the curve in contango
- Second-month VIX futures 18.65 (-0.27%)
Skew and correlation
- CBOE SKEW 145.74 (+0.25%), the premium paid for out-of-the-money downside protection, still elevated
- COR3M 7.94 (+4.06%), a very low three-month implied correlation
- DSPX 45.88 (-0.91%), the S&P 500 dispersion index
Cross-asset volatility
- OVX 47.59 (+18.00%), the standout, taking the OVX-to-VIX ratio to 2.95 (+13.76%)
- MOVE 70.25 (+6.82%) · GVZ 26.21 (+3.47%)
- VXN 27.92 (+4.14%) · RVX 21.66 (+3.24%) · VVIX 87.90 (+0.93%)
Source: Saxo, Bloomberg, CBOE, 8 July 2026.
What the market is pricing
- Near-term equity risk repriced up, off a very low base. VIX1D bounced 22% to 10.66 after Monday's collapse, and Saxo's SPX gauge puts the weekly expected move at about 64 points (0.85%) into Friday's 10 July expiry, with today's FOMC minutes the catalyst that could widen it.
- The geopolitical premium is in crude, not stocks. OVX up 18% against a VIX still at 16 says the option market is pricing the Strait of Hormuz risk through oil volatility, while equity front-end premium stays cheap and the S&P curve holds contango.
- Tail and rates hedges stayed on. SKEW at 145.74 sits well above its neutral 100 to 120 zone, and MOVE firming to 70.25 alongside a 10-year at 4.55% shows the vol bid is in downside protection and duration, not the equity index.
- A rotation, not a broad de-risking. COR3M near 7.9 (very low implied correlation) alongside a still-elevated DSPX says the market is pricing names moving apart rather than falling together, consistent with money leaving chips for energy and defensives.
Today's catalysts
The session is event-heavy after a quiet Monday and Tuesday. The EIA weekly crude and fuel stocks report lands at 16:30 CET, the Treasury sells $39 billion of 10-year notes at 19:00 CET, and the minutes of the 17 June FOMC meeting are released at 20:00 CET, the one scheduled catalyst that can move the front end of the vol curve. Oil headlines out of the Strait of Hormuz remain the wildcard, and Q2 earnings season opens Friday with Delta Air Lines ahead of the megacap reports later in the month.
Conclusion
The volatility story has changed venue. For an options trader the tell today is not the VIX at 16 but the 18% jump in oil vol and a firmer MOVE, geopolitics repricing risk in crude and rates while equity front-end premium stays cheap and the term structure holds its contango. Into FOMC minutes and a 10-year auction, the cross-asset volatility bid, rather than the equity tape, is where the session's risk is concentrated.
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.