- VIX1D collapsed to 13.56 (–22.8%): today’s H1 close is priced for an unusually quiet session.
- SKEW rose to 144.46 while VIX fell – tail protection demand grew, it did not shrink.
- NFP lands Thursday July 2 into a closed Friday: the week’s real vol event is 72 hours out.
Headline driver
Technology stocks and chipmakers snapped back hard on Monday after their worst weekly session since April 2025, sending the Nasdaq 100 up 2.3% and the S&P 500 up 1.2% into today’s final H1 session, while USDJPY broke to a new modern high above 162 not seen since the 1980s. Saxo Quick Take, 30 June 2026.
Market snapshot – Monday 29 June 2026 close
S&P 500: 7,440.44 (+1.18%), Nasdaq 100: 29,774.75 (+2.25%), Dow: 52,188 (+0.59%). IWM shed 0.29% – the one holdout. Chipmakers led: SMH +3.33%, mega-cap tech up 3–5% across the board. Gold slipped to $3,982.80 (–1.39%), WTI at $70.39 (source: Saxo platform / Bloomberg, 30 June 2026 06:01 CET).
Market regime (in our view): Low-volatility bull – VIX 17.5, 20-day realised vol 17.1% (rising), S&P 500 +0.94% above its 50-day moving average.
Volatility surface – 30 June 2026, approx. 06:00 CET
VIX term structure
- VIX (30-day): 17.65 (–4.0%). Retreated as the equity rebound ran. Headline vol is calm.
- VIX1D: 13.56 (–22.8%). The 1-day measure pricing today’s H1 close as a materially quieter session than recent realised moves. The gap to realised vol (17.1%) is the defining compression.
- VIX9D: 15.51. The near-dated forward window – covers the NFP print on Thursday. Event premium has not yet fully built into this tenor.
- VIX3M: 19.53. Normal contango beyond the immediate close. The short-end/long-end spread (VIX1D 13.56 vs VIX3M 19.53) is unusually wide – the medium-term regime has not resolved with the spot VIX move lower.
VIX futures
- Front-month VIX futures: 18.45. Trades at a premium to spot VIX (17.65), consistent with a calendar that carries NFP and late-July FOMC ahead.
Skew and correlation
- CBOE SKEW: 144.46 (+3.63%). Rose while VIX fell – the outlier of the session. Demand for far-OTM downside protection grew at the same time near-dated vol was being sold. These two signals moving together is not typical.
- COR3M: 8.98 (–9.75%). Near cycle lows. Stocks are trading on individual fundamentals, not a shared macro signal. The chipmaker divergence from small caps and IWM confirms this.
- DSPX: 44.13 (+3.86%). Elevated dispersion index, consistent with the wide return spread between the best and worst names on Monday.
Other vol measures
- VVIX: 88.71. Vol-of-vol contained below 100 – no second-order fear signal.
- VXN: 29.37 (–4.70%). Nasdaq vol retreated with the index rebound.
- MOVE: 68.14 (+2.03%) · VXTLT: 10.36. Bond vol nudged higher – rates uncertainty has not fully resolved even with Treasuries little changed on the day.
Options flow sentiment – where did the smart money go?
Based on end-of-day 29 June 2026 – yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.
The dominant signal was AMZN, where call-side flow concentrated decisively in longer-dated structures – dealer hedging of those short calls provided the mechanical bid through Monday’s session. Index and ETF flow was call-tilted on aggregate but dominated by mid-market, quarter-end rebalancing prints rather than fresh conviction; credit-sensitive names added quiet put protection beneath the surface.
What to watch today: If Nasdaq 100 and SMH fade from the open without a catalyst, that exposes Monday’s move as rebalancing-driven. A sustained bid through the first hour confirms dealer hedging flows are still in play.
Options angle – calm on the surface, SKEW says otherwise
VIX1D at 13.56 and VIX3M at 19.53 tells the story: today is priced for calm, the medium-term is not. Front-month futures at 18.45 above spot VIX reinforces this. In our view the more significant signal is SKEW at 144.46 rising while VIX fell – dealers selling near-dated vol while far-OTM puts get bid up simultaneously tends to reflect a view that the near-term drift is manageable but the tail risk hasn’t gone away. Iran/Doha, NFP compression into a long weekend, and late-July FOMC are sitting in that catalogue.
What the market is pricing
- Today’s session: a non-event. VIX1D at 13.56 vs. realised vol at 17.1% – the options market is pricing today’s H1 close as materially quieter than recent realised moves.
- Thursday’s NFP: a 1.1% move. Pre-market SPXW implies roughly 84 points end-of-week (~7,361–7,529). Several 2026 NFP prints delivered 1.5–2% intraday – whether 1.1% adequately prices that risk is the key question going into Thursday.
- Tail risk: growing, not shrinking. SKEW at 144.46 rising while VIX fell – the market is simultaneously selling near-dated vol and buying far-OTM puts. Those two things don’t usually move together.
- Sector correlation: disconnected. COR3M at 8.98 signals stocks are moving on individual fundamentals, not a shared macro pulse – a stock-picker’s environment, not a broad risk-on tape.
Conclusion
Today is a rebalancing session dressed up as a trend day – do not extrapolate the calm. The actionable week starts Thursday.
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.
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Published by:
Sarah Williams