Options Brief - Chip surge, new S&P record - 3 June 2026

The S&P 500 just closed above 7,600 for the first time, driven by a 22% surge in Marvell Technology and a 30% jump in HPE, both on AI news. But here’s the part the headline didn’t tell you: institutions were buying more put protection than calls on the same day. Today’s Options Brief covers what that put/call ratio divergence means, why the vol term structure is flagging event risk ahead, and two educational strategy structures worth understanding ...

Options Brief – Chip surge, new S&P record – 3 June 2026

The S&P 500 closed above 7,600 for the first time, but the options market was building protection under the surface.

Semiconductors and AI infrastructure stocks drove the June 2 session, with Marvell Technology jumping 22% after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang called it a potential next trillion-dollar company, HPE rallying 30% on an AI-fuelled guidance upgrade, and Broadcom rising 5% ahead of quarterly results due after today’s close. The S&P 500 closed above 7,600 for the first time on record; Alphabet fell roughly 4% on news of an $80 billion stock sale to fund AI spending, a contrast that captures the dispersion running through the AI trade and frames what to watch when Broadcom reports tonight.

Market snapshot

  • S&P 500: 7,609.78 (+0.13%), first close above 7,600
  • Nasdaq 100: 30,660.60 (+0.48%)
  • Russell 2000: 2,931.96 (+0.90%), the strongest major index on the session
  • WTI crude oil futures: 95.17 (+1.50%), elevated on persistent Israel–Lebanon tensions
  • Market regime: Low vol bull – VIX 15.77, 20-day realised vol 9.5% (decreasing), S&P 500 +7.18% above its 50-day moving average

Options flow sentiment

Based on end-of-day 2 June 2026 – yesterday’s positioning, not today’s price action.

Single-name flow split along AI-chip lines: NVDA attracted the session’s largest confirmed upside call interest while TSLA and MU leaned clearly defensive, with MSFT showing a call-supply tone that kept the broad tech bullish read muted. Index and ETF flow told a cleaner hedging story, with put structures pointing to protection into the June macro calendar, partly offset by upside call demand in tech-focused ETF options.

Options angle

The VIX closed at 15.77 on June 2, continuing its gradual drift lower; VIX9D fell further to 13.19, creating a noticeable gap between very near-term and 30-day implied vol that points to near-term calm with medium-term event risk priced further out the curve. The CBOE S&P 500 put/call ratio (PCSX), which measures the volume of protective put trading relative to bullish call activity, rose 10.48% on the day to 1.16, confirming that institutional hedging was building alongside the record close rather than retreating from it.

Strategy insight – Post-earnings volatility fade. When a large technology company reports earnings, implied volatility in that stock tends to inflate in the run-up and then collapse sharply after the announcement, regardless of whether the result beats or misses. This pattern, known as the volatility crush, is what a short iron butterfly is designed to exploit: the position is short an at-the-money call and an at-the-money put, with bought wings further out on each side to define the maximum loss. The structure earns from implied vol falling back toward normal levels after the event, not from correctly predicting the direction of the earnings reaction. The maximum loss is the distance between the body and wing strikes, minus the net premium collected, and it occurs if the stock makes a large enough move to carry through either wing. 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 – Calendar spread into an event window. When near-term implied volatility is running significantly below that of options expiring around a known macro event, the difference in pricing across the curve can support a calendar spread. The trade is short a near-dated at-the-money option and long the same-strike option in the expiry closest to the event window. The front leg benefits from faster time decay in a low near-term vol environment, while the back leg holds value linked to event uncertainty further out. This is not a directional trade: it earns from the difference in how each leg’s value erodes over time, and it works best when the underlying stays near the strike during the life of the front-month option. The main risk is a sharp move in the underlying before the near-dated leg expires, which pushes the position off-strike and can eliminate the spread’s value regardless of the vol differential.

Conclusion

The market is printing records on the back of an AI theme that keeps finding new names to move, but the options market is flagging a two-speed dynamic: spot grinds higher while institutional hedging builds below the surface. Broadcom’s earnings after today’s close will test whether semiconductor leadership can hold into the June macro window, or whether the cautious positioning already being built starts to pay off. The vol term structure is telling traders that the near term looks clear and the medium term does not. That message is worth heeding heading into today’s session.

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