Quarterly Outlook
Upending the global order at blinding speed
John J. Hardy
Global Head of Macro Strategy
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: Volatility has transitioned from a short-term spike to a structurally elevated regime, with the VIX spiking above 60 and futures pricing stress well into summer. For options traders, the combination of macro risk, short gamma flows, and term structure inversion creates both challenges and opportunities
Last week wasn’t just volatile—it was structurally chaotic. The VIX surged above 45. Options volume crossed 100 million contracts in a single day. Single-stock and index options both exploded in activity. But underneath the panic was something even more interesting: a shift in how volatility itself is being created, traded, and absorbed.
Now, that shift has intensified. The VIX spiked above 60 overnight and is holding above 50 during the U.S. session. Volatility isn’t just a response to headlines—it’s a reflection of deeply stressed macro conditions.
For options traders, this is no longer just a spike. It’s a case study in what happens when market mechanics, dealer flows, and macro catalysts converge to trigger a sustained volatility regime. This article breaks down the drivers behind the current state of the market, how intraday swings are being amplified, and what signals to monitor as conditions evolve.
It’s no longer just institutional funds or quant desks trading short-dated options. The rise of zero-day-to-expiry (0DTE) contracts—especially on the S&P 500—has transformed the way intraday volatility behaves. These options are hyper-sensitive to price changes, and when volume concentrates in one direction, dealer hedging becomes reactive, not stabilizing.
Here’s the core mechanic:
Recent analysis from UBS and Bank of America shows that some of the largest intraday swings in Q1 2025 have aligned with periods when SPX dealer gamma positioning flipped deeply negative—including the ongoing tariff-driven stress.
On Friday, options volume reached 100.2 million contracts—an all-time high, and 71% above the 2025 daily average. That’s not just noise. Here's how it breaks down:
What does this tell us?
Many traders were caught offside going into the news, triggering panic protection buying.
The VIX briefly spiked above 60 overnight, before settling around 51 during U.S. trading hours. That’s well above crisis-level territory, and futures are now pricing sustained stress through summer. Contracts out to June are trading near 30, a sharp increase from ~20 just days ago.
The term structure is now the most inverted since COVID, with 1-month SPX implied volatility at 41%, while 1-year IV remains at 23%. This suggests the market sees extreme near-term risk, but hasn't yet priced in a long-duration bear scenario.
Indicator | Signal |
---|---|
VIX | Peaked at 60 overnight; holding above 50 intraday |
VIX futures | June contract near 30 — sharply higher from last week |
SPX IV (1M) | 41% — 5-year high |
SPX IV (1Y) | 23% — below 2020 and 2022 bear markets |
Term structure | Deeply inverted — front-end panic, back-end still stable |
Breadth & correlation | Remain extremely weak — consistent with capitulation behavior |
According to Cboe and UBS strategists, this volatility shift is fundamentally driven—not a positioning unwind like in August. With economic growth concerns rising and policy risk front and center, a fast volatility fade seems unlikely.
This isn’t the type of environment to blindly chase volatility. But there are clear structural dynamics traders are monitoring:
Watch estimates of SPX gamma exposure. When positioning is neutral or long, intraday moves tend to calm. When short, expect spikes and trend extensions.
If VIX starts to fall while SPY continues lower, it can signal volatility exhaustion or the start of a volatility crush.
Names like AMZN and IWM showed signs of intraday strength even as the broader market sold off. These could become early reversal leaders if gamma flips or macro data surprises.
Short-term IV has exploded, but longer-dated contracts remain relatively subdued. If 1Y volatility starts to lift, it may indicate a shift toward pricing sustained economic risk, not just tactical fear.
⚠️ Not advice—these are examples of strategies traders are using in volatile markets:
Setup | Strategy | Why traders use it |
---|---|---|
Bearish trend continuation | Call credit spreads above resistance (e.g. SPY 538) | Defined risk, benefits from high IV and resistance levels |
Speculative reversal | Short put spreads near SPY 480 | Takes advantage of peak fear zones and possible support |
Volatility crush play | Calendar spreads or diagonal puts | Bets on IV reversion once the panic cools |
Event hedging | Long puts ahead of CPI or earnings (XLF) | Protects against downside into catalysts like JPM/WFC earnings |
Note: Execution and timing are everything in a market driven by intraday flows. Strategies that ignore market structure—especially gamma—can underperform quickly.
Volatility traders are already looking ahead to a packed macro and earnings calendar, any of which could add fuel to this volatile environment.
So far, the European Union has not formally responded to the latest U.S.–China tariff escalation. But any indication of retaliatory trade measures could trigger further macro stress, particularly for globally exposed sectors such as industrials, autos, and luxury goods.
Date | Event | Impact Potential |
---|---|---|
Wed, Apr 9 | FOMC minutes (20:00 CET) | Any signal on rate cuts or QT changes could shift rate and volatility curves |
Thu, Apr 10 | CPI (14:30 CET) | Core CPI expected at 0.3% MoM – higher would likely spike front-end vol |
Thu, Apr 10 | Jobless claims | Labor softness could reframe Fed expectations |
Fri, Apr 11 | PPI (14:30 CET) | Final inflation read of the week – also rate-sensitive |
Treasury auctions (10Y Wednesday, 30Y Thursday) could also affect rate-sensitive vol structures.
Earnings season begins Friday with major U.S. banks, often key volatility triggers in macro-sensitive markets:
Company | Reporting Friday, Apr 11 |
---|---|
JPMorgan (JPM) | Forecast EPS: 4.62 |
Wells Fargo (WFC) | Forecast EPS: 1.23 |
Morgan Stanley (MS) | Forecast EPS: 2.26 |
BlackRock (BLK) | Forecast EPS: 10.76 |
Bank of NY Mellon (BK) | Forecast EPS: 1.51 |
Guidance and commentary from these firms could influence not just XLF, but broader market sentiment.
This volatility event is no longer just about fear—it’s about pricing in policy risk, growth fears, and market structure stress. The rise of 0DTEs, gamma sensitivity, and a deeply inverted volatility curve have created a regime where volatility is both the outcome and the driver.
For options traders, this is a moment of both risk and opportunity. But edge only exists where structure is understood—and respected.