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VIX Report - Cboe Volatility Index News

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Over VIX Report - Cboe Volatility Index News

Stay ahead of the market with the "VIX Report: The Cboe Volatility Index" podcast. Dive deep into the dynamics of the VIX, the premier measure of market volatility and investor sentiment. Our expert analysis, market insights, and interviews with financial professionals provide you with the knowledge to navigate the ever-changing financial landscape. Whether you're a seasoned investor or just getting started, this podcast offers valuable information to help you make informed decisions. Subscribe now and never miss an update on the Cboe Volatility Index and its impact on global markets. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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aflevering VIX Drops 7.27 Percent to 17.10: Stock Market Volatility Expectations Ease as Equity Markets Stabilize artwork

VIX Drops 7.27 Percent to 17.10: Stock Market Volatility Expectations Ease as Equity Markets Stabilize

The Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, is currently trading at a sale price of about 17.10, according to the Cboe VIX dashboard on Cboe Global Markets. Cboe reports that this represents a percent change of roughly minus 7.27 percent, a drop of about 1.34 points from the last close near 18.44. That negative percent change indicates that expected volatility in the U.S. stock market over the next 30 days has eased meaningfully since the last session. The VIX is derived from real-time options prices on the S&P 500 Index, and Cboe explains that it reflects investors’ consensus view of future 30‑day volatility in the equity market based on those SPX option premiums. When traders are willing to pay less for downside protection or upside speculation, the implied volatility embedded in options prices falls, and the VIX declines. Several underlying factors typically drive a move like today’s drop. According to Cboe’s description of the index, calmer equity price action and narrowing daily trading ranges in the S&P 500 tend to pull implied volatility lower as realized volatility comes down and market participants adjust their hedges. If recent macroeconomic data or central bank communications have come in largely in line with expectations, that also reduces uncertainty, which can translate into more aggressive selling of volatility by institutional investors and systematic strategies. In addition, a constructive tone in risk assets, such as rising stock prices and tightening credit spreads, often coincides with investors unwinding prior hedges, contributing to a softer VIX reading. Looking at recent levels reported by Cboe, the VIX has been oscillating in a relatively moderate band compared with the elevated spikes seen during periods of acute stress, such as major policy surprises or geopolitical shocks. A reading in the high teens, even after today’s sizable percentage decline, is broadly consistent with a market that is not in full risk‑off mode but still pricing in some degree of event risk and uncertainty. Historically, extended stretches of VIX trading in the low to mid‑teens have aligned with steady bull markets and subdued realized volatility, while moves above 20 and especially above 30 have marked phases of heightened concern. The current pullback of more than 7 percent from the prior close continues a broader trend in which volatility has been mean‑reverting after any brief flare‑ups, as option markets repeatedly reprice from fear back toward a more neutral stance once immediate worries fade or data clarify the outlook. According to Cboe’s materials on VIX and its related products, this pattern of short‑lived spikes followed by declines is a defining characteristic of volatility markets, reflecting how quickly sentiment can shift as new information is absorbed. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more from me check out Quiet Please dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

18 jun 2026 - 3 min
aflevering VIX Drops to 16.2 as Options Market Signals Investor Calm and Reduced Hedging Demand artwork

VIX Drops to 16.2 as Options Market Signals Investor Calm and Reduced Hedging Demand

The Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, is currently trading at a sale price of about 16.2, according to Cboe’s own VIX dashboard and major quote services. That puts the percent change since the last reported close at roughly minus 0.1%, essentially flat to slightly lower on the day. In practical terms, a VIX level near 16 suggests a relatively calm options market on the S&P 500. Cboe and S&P Dow Jones Indices describe the VIX as a real-time gauge of 30‑day expected volatility derived from S&P 500 index option prices. When traders bid up option premiums because they expect big market swings, the VIX rises. When demand for downside protection fades and option prices ease, the VIX drifts lower. The small negative percent change today reflects modestly cheaper option premiums versus the prior close and indicates that investors are slightly less eager to pay for protection than they were yesterday. Broadly, levels below about 20 are often associated by market commentators with a more stable or complacent environment, while readings above 30 tend to coincide with episodes of stress or fear. Recent trends help explain today’s move. Data from Cboe, the St. Louis Fed’s VIX closing series, and real‑time charting platforms show that in recent sessions the VIX has pulled back from the high teens toward the mid‑teens. This follows a period when volatility briefly picked up on concerns about interest rates, inflation data, and pockets of equity market weakness, pushing the VIX several points higher week over week. As those worries eased and equity indexes firmed, implied volatility bled lower, bringing the VIX back toward its longer‑run post‑crisis range. Several underlying factors are contributing to the muted percent change: First, major macroeconomic releases and central bank decisions immediately ahead appear relatively well telegraphed, so there is less need for investors to rush into protective options. Second, realized volatility in the S&P 500 – the actual day‑to‑day price swings – has been contained, which historically pressures implied volatility lower as option sellers grow more confident. Third, there is an ongoing pattern of “volatility selling” strategies, where institutions systematically sell index options to harvest premium. When markets are calm, this supply of options can weigh on implied volatility and keep the VIX subdued. At the same time, the VIX is not at extreme lows; it is sitting in a middle‑of‑the‑road zone that suggests investors are relaxed but not oblivious to potential shocks. This is consistent with an environment where the market is balancing solid corporate earnings and resilient economic data against lingering risks from policy shifts, geopolitics, and the possibility of an abrupt correction after strong equity gains. Overall, today’s small downgrade in the VIX sale price and modest negative percent change fit into a broader trend of gradually easing volatility after a short‑lived spike, with traders content, for now, to pay a little less for insurance while still keeping one eye on the horizon. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more from me check out QuietPlease dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

16 jun 2026 - 3 min
aflevering VIX Holds Steady at 17.68: Market Fear Gauge Shows Cautious Equilibrium With No Change artwork

VIX Holds Steady at 17.68: Market Fear Gauge Shows Cautious Equilibrium With No Change

The Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, is currently showing a sale price of 17.68, with a percent change of 0.00% since it was last reported, according to the Cboe VIX Index dashboard on Cboe Global Markets. The VIX is often called the market’s “fear gauge” because it reflects expectations for S&P 500 volatility over the next 30 days, derived from real-time SPX option prices. Cboe explains that it is based on the implied volatility embedded in a broad strip of near-term S&P 500 call and put options, making it a forward-looking measure of how turbulent investors expect the market to be in the short term. A reading of 17.68 places volatility modestly above the very low teens that are typical of calm, complacent markets, but well below the extreme spikes seen during major crises when the VIX can surge above 40 or even 80, as documented historically by Cboe and the St. Louis Fed’s VIX series. The fact that the percent change is flat at 0.00% suggests that, since the last close, there has been no meaningful re-pricing of near-term risk in SPX options. In other words, the options market is currently in a holding pattern on volatility expectations. Several underlying factors likely explain this lack of movement. According to Cboe’s own description of the index, VIX levels are most sensitive to shifts in equity market direction, option demand for protection, macroeconomic data, central bank signals, and event risk. When markets are relatively stable, with no major surprise in economic releases, policy announcements, or geopolitical developments, demand for downside protection tends to normalize and the VIX can hover with little day-to-day change. A flat percent change also fits the broader pattern that volatility often compresses after large moves. After periods of elevated stress or uncertainty, markets frequently experience a “volatility decay” as traders adjust hedges, risk managers reduce emergency protection, and realized volatility in the S&P 500 settles down. With the index now in the high teens and unchanged on the day, it suggests that investors see some risk on the horizon but nothing new enough to warrant repricing since the last close. In terms of trend, data from Cboe’s historical VIX series and commentary from market educators like TD Direct Investing show that the VIX tends to oscillate in regimes: low-to-mid teens in benign environments, high teens to mid-20s in more cautious phases, and much higher during shock events. Sitting at 17.68 with no change aligns with a cautious but not alarmed regime. It hints that traders are watching macro and earnings developments closely, but positioning remains measured rather than panicked. As always, because the VIX is derived from option prices, any sudden shift in equity markets, option volumes, or expected catalysts can quickly break this calm and produce a meaningful percentage move, up or down. For now, though, the unchanged reading underscores a temporary equilibrium in the market’s collective outlook on short-term volatility. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more from me check out Quiet Please dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

13 jun 2026 - 3 min
aflevering VIX Jumps 11.8% to 22.22 as Market Volatility Surges on Fed Policy and Economic Uncertainty artwork

VIX Jumps 11.8% to 22.22 as Market Volatility Surges on Fed Policy and Economic Uncertainty

The Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, is currently quoted on Cboe’s own VIX dashboard at 22.22, which you can think of as the present “sale price” of market volatility as implied by S&P 500 index options. According to Cboe, the latest reported change is 0.00 points, a 0.00% move from the previous mark on the site, indicating that this 22.22 level is the most recent updated value without an additional tick since last posted. Even with that flat print on the dashboard, context from market data providers such as Investing.com and Barchart shows that the VIX is up sharply versus the prior close of 19.87, a gain of about 2.35 points, or roughly 11.8%. That move pushes the index solidly above the psychologically important 20 level, signaling that traders are now pricing in a more unsettled, higher‑volatility 30‑day outlook for the S&P 500. The underlying driver of every VIX move is the price of near‑term S&P 500 index options. When demand for protection rises and option premiums increase, the VIX calculation, which aggregates out‑of‑the‑money calls and puts, pushes higher. Recent strength in the VIX suggests a rotation from complacency into caution: investors are paying up for downside hedges and, in some cases, upside calls that position for wider swings in the index. Several factors typically explain this kind of jump: First, macro uncertainty. Shifts in expectations for Federal Reserve policy, new inflation data, or surprise economic releases often trigger repricing in both the stock and options markets. If traders suddenly anticipate a bumpier path for growth, rates, or corporate earnings, they hedge, and volatility premiums expand. Second, equity market behavior. A pullback or choppy trading in the S&P 500 tends to coincide with a higher VIX, as systematic strategies increase hedging and short‑term traders speculate on further turbulence. Even modest declines can lead to outsized VIX responses if positioning had become crowded in low‑volatility trades. Third, event risk. Approaching catalysts such as central bank meetings, major tech earnings, or geopolitical developments frequently lift implied volatility as investors insure portfolios against surprise outcomes. Once those events pass, the VIX can retrace quickly if the worst fears fail to materialize. In terms of trend, the latest reading around 22 is above the low‑to‑mid‑teens regime that often characterizes calm markets, but still below the 30‑plus zone associated with acute stress or panic. Historically, levels in the low 20s reflect a market that is uneasy but not in crisis, a phase where investors are adjusting to new information and repricing risk, rather than reacting to a shock. If this elevated range persists, it can influence strategy: option sellers may see richer premiums, hedgers may need to pay more for protection, and volatility‑linked products can experience larger day‑to‑day swings. Traders will be watching whether the VIX backs off again toward 15–18, signaling renewed confidence, or continues to build toward 25–30, confirming a more durable risk‑off tone. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more from me check out Quiet Please dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

11 jun 2026 - 3 min
aflevering VIX Drops 12 Percent to 18.92 as Market Fear Eases and Volatility Spike Retraces artwork

VIX Drops 12 Percent to 18.92 as Market Fear Eases and Volatility Spike Retraces

The Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, is currently showing a sale price of 18.92, with a percent change of minus 12.04 percent since it was last reported. According to Cboe’s own VIX dashboard, that move represents a drop of 2.59 points from the previous close of 21.51, with today’s trading session opening around 20.29 and then sliding lower as the day has progressed. Cboe describes the VIX as a real-time gauge of market expectations for near‑term volatility based on S&P 500 index option prices. When the VIX declines this sharply, it typically signals that traders are collectively pricing in less fear and lower expected price swings in the S&P 500 over the next 30 days. This 12‑percent pullback suggests that the intense risk-off mood that recently pushed the VIX up over 21 is easing, at least for now. Several underlying factors can drive a move like this. First, when recent macroeconomic data comes in roughly in line with expectations, it reduces uncertainty around Federal Reserve policy and growth, which tends to lower option premiums and pull the VIX down. Second, a firm or rising S&P 500 usually coincides with investors selling downside protection they no longer feel they need, again pressing volatility lower. Third, any reduction in headline risk—whether from calmer geopolitical news, fewer surprise earnings warnings, or more clarity on policy—also feeds into cheaper implied volatility. Cboe’s recent commentary notes that equity volatility had spiked, with the VIX up more than six points week over week to above 21, placing it in a historically elevated percentile. Today’s move back under 19 suggests that that spike is retracing and that the market is transitioning from a stress episode toward a more neutral, though still slightly above long‑term average, volatility regime. In other words, the fear gauge is cooling off, but it has not collapsed back to the ultra‑low levels seen in very complacent markets. Trend‑wise, over the last year the VIX has been oscillating between the mid‑teens and low‑20s rather than staying pinned at single‑digit or low‑teens readings. That pattern reflects a market where shocks flare up more frequently, but are also being faded quickly as investors buy dips and sell volatility when fear peaks. Today’s sharp negative percent change fits that recurring pattern: a quick rise in volatility on bad or uncertain news, followed by an equally quick normalization once the worst‑case scenarios fail to materialize. To recap for listeners: the VIX sale price is about 18.92, down roughly 12.04 percent from the last close, driven by easing risk perceptions, steadier equity prices, and calmer expectations around macro and policy news. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more from me check out QuietPlease dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

9 jun 2026 - 3 min
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