Put interest in SMH hits record as traders hedge the semiconductor rally
Open interest in SMH puts has climbed to about 1.7 million contracts while implied volatility rises and call exposure lags.
Auf einen Blick
- Put open interest in the VanEck Semiconductor ETF has surged to a record level, suggesting traders are hedging the semiconductor rally rather than aggressively betting against it.
- Implied volatility is also elevated, especially versus the broader market.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
The article focuses on options activity in the VanEck Semiconductor ETF, which tracks semiconductor stocks. It contrasts rising put demand in the ETF with very high implied volatility in some single-name chip stocks such as Micron.
Open interest in put contracts on the VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) has surged over the past two months to just under 1.7 million, the most ever, according to Bloomberg data going back to the fund's launch in 2011. By comparison, there are just over 500,000 outstanding call contracts.
At the same time, implied volatility in SMH is rising, nearing 55% Tuesday, near the highest in more than a year. That is a sign that the puts are mostly being bought, according to Zed Francis, chief investment officer at Chicago-based Convexitas.
"People are hedging the move rather than leaning to it," Francis said, referring to his semiconductor options trading strategy on behalf of clients. "We've had this jump-move in the space but it's resulting in hedging activity rather than a chase. So this might be more sustainable than a boom and bust."
Outright bearish speculation may not tell the entire story for the buildup in puts in the sector ETF. The appeal of SMH puts may also be tied to how manic — and expensive — options trading has gotten in single stocks.
Similar to how implied volatility in the chip sector is high compared with the broader S&P 500's 16% vol, implied volatility in single stocks is even higher. That means there may be situations in which traders find it advantageous to use the sector ETF instead of trading in single stocks like Micron, where implied volatility is 105%.
"If you start trading stuff when it's 100 to 120 percent vol with inverted skews, what kind of strategies can you use," Don Kaufman, co-founder of TheoTrade, said in a phone call after the bell. "Implied volatility was just a fever pitch in Micron, so I took the other side in SMH."
Kaufman bought the 535/525-strike put spread in SMH expiring in late August.
"I'm taking a far out-of-the-money shot on it, a 30-delta spread looking for the ultimate pullback," he said. "The squeeze has got to be ending soon. Who in their right mind would want to spend this much on jaw-dropping crap?"
Worauf zu achten ist
KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten
SMH options activity will likely remain elevated if semiconductor volatility stays high.
Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Tagen
Traders may continue using SMH options instead of single-stock options when single-name volatility remains extreme.
Möglich · Innerhalb von Wochen
Offene Fragen
- Will the elevated put demand translate into a sustained pullback in semiconductor stocks?
- Is the surge in puts mostly hedging or outright bearish speculation?
- How will implied volatility in SMH and single-name chip stocks move next?






