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: The S&P 500’s nine-day winning streak ended on 3 June, knocked back by higher oil, renewed US-Iran tension and a Broadcom AI-chip outlook that disappointed after the close. The index move was modest, but the options market reacted in a more telling way.
A nine-day winning streak ended on oil, geopolitics and a Broadcom AI wobble, and the front end of the volatility curve woke up first.
Renewed US-Iran fighting lifted oil and bond yields through the 3 June session while Broadcom’s AI-chip outlook disappointed after the close, ending Wall Street’s nine-session run and reintroducing event risk just as the market heads into today’s jobless claims and Friday’s nonfarm payrolls. The headline move was modest, but underneath it the volatility term structure shifted in a way that matters more to options traders than the index level itself. The full macro picture is in Saxo’s Market Quick Take – 4 June 2026.
Based on end-of-day 3 June 2026 – yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.
Single-name flow leaned bullish, with confirmed-opening call demand concentrated in mega-cap tech and semiconductors; were those calls dealer-sold, market makers would hedge by buying the underlying, a mildly upside-supportive bias. Index and ETF flow told a more defensive story, with broad put demand across the S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 and semiconductor ETFs, suggesting portfolios are adding single-name upside while keeping index-level protection on.
The VIX closed at 16.06, up 1.84%, but the action was at the front end: the 1-day VIX jumped 29.3% to 11.48 as traders bid short-dated protection into today’s jobless claims and Friday’s nonfarm payrolls. The term structure stayed upward-sloping (1-day 11.48, 9-day 13.41, 30-day 16.06), so the event premium is sitting in the very front rather than across the curve. SPX options price a move of roughly ±0.74% through Friday, and the front expiry still shows a moderate downside skew, with puts richer than equivalent calls but well below stress levels.
Strategy insight – Calendar spread to harvest the front-end vol spike. With the 1-day VIX up nearly 29% while the 9-day and 30-day measures barely moved, the front of the term structure now carries most of the event premium. A calendar spread, selling a near-dated option and buying a longer-dated option at the same strike, profits if that elevated near-term implied volatility deflates once the data passes while the back-dated leg holds its value. Centre the strikes near spot and place the short leg in the expiry that captures payrolls. The main risk is a large directional move away from the chosen strike, which erodes both legs and can turn the structure into a loss.
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 – Jade lizard to monetise the put skew in a bull regime. Moderate downside skew means index puts are priced richer than comparable calls, which rewards selling that premium while the low-vol-bull backdrop keeps a constructive lean intact. A jade lizard, a short out-of-the-money put plus a short out-of-the-money call spread, collects enough credit to remove upside risk entirely while leaving a defined downside exposure. It fits a neutral-to-mildly-bullish view better than an outright short put because the call spread cheapens the position without adding tail risk above. The main risk is a sharp decline below the short put strike, where losses build much like owning the underlying from that level.
The low-vol bull regime is still intact, but the streak ending on oil, geopolitics and Broadcom’s AI wobble has pulled event risk into the next 48 hours. In our view the edge is in the shape of the curve, not the direction: front-end premium is rich against a still-calm back end, which favours selling near-dated event vol over chasing the move. That makes this an environment that rewards patience over conviction until payrolls clears the deck.
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