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BackS&P 500 Recovery Makes Hedging More Affordable and Strategic
S&P 500 Recovery Makes Hedging More Affordable and Strategic
NEWS
CNBC5/22/2026Business2 min read

S&P 500 Recovery Makes Hedging More Affordable and Strategic

Quick Look

  • The S&P 500's 17% rally off March lows, driven by tariff relief optimism, resilient earnings, and semiconductor rebound, has made hedging more affordable.
  • With volatility lower, put options cost less, offering investors a strategic opportunity to protect gains.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

The S&P 500 has recovered over 17% from its March lows, driven by optimism on trade tariffs, resilient earnings, and a rebound in semiconductors. This rally has made hedging strategies more affordable.

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The S&P 500 has staged an impressive recovery, rallying more than 17% off its March lows on a combination of tariff relief optimism, resilient earnings and a powerful rebound in semiconductors. It is a move that has rewarded patience. It is also one that has quietly made hedging both more affordable and more strategically sensible.

The arithmetic is straightforward. Protection costs less when volatility is compressed. With the VIX sitting in the high teens, well below the stress levels that accompanied the March selloff, the implied volatility priced into put options has pulled back sharply. Buying a one-month 2-2.5% out-of-the-money put (about 30 "delta", sometimes written as 30^) today costs a fraction of what it cost when the market was in free fall. If you're the type of investor that likes to hedge when you can, rather than when you have to, now's your chance.

And there's good reason to think hedging still makes sense, consider the conditions that drove the rally: tariff progress, earnings resilience and hopes the bottleneck in the Strait of Hormuz might resolve. That and momentum are not the same as resolved fundamentals. The Federal Reserve remains effectively sidelined as higher oil prices have pushed inflation higher. Consequently, Treasury yields are elevated relative to year-to-date lows and gold, despite retreating from its January peak, continues to signal that institutional safe-haven demand has not evaporated.

The equal-weighted S&P 500 has stalled near prior highs even as the cap-weighted index pushes higher. If one cares about "breadth", that divergence may warrant attention.

After a 17% move, portfolios that entered the year defensively are now sitting on meaningful unrealized gains. The asymmetry of the decision shifts: the downside cost of being wrong has grown, while the marginal benefit of further upside participation diminishes.

Buying a short-dated 30-day, 30-delta put can lock in a meaningful portion of those gains at current implied volatility levels. For example one can pay about $7.40 or ~1% of the current level of SPY to buy the June 26th weekly $730 strike puts.

One more thing - be sure to "monetize" your hedge if we do see a meaningful drawdown. Roll down or down and out if the puts go in the money. Failing to do that is a bit like failing to file an insurance claim in the event of an accident - the premiums go to waste.

The best time to buy insurance is not when the house is burning. It is after the smoke clears — before the next storm forms.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Investors can lock in gains by buying short-dated put options.

    Very likely · Short term

  • Monetizing hedges by rolling down or out if puts go in the money during a drawdown.

    Very likely · Short term

Open Questions

  • Will the current market rally be sustained given mixed fundamentals?
  • What are the long-term implications of the Federal Reserve remaining sidelined?
  • How will ongoing geopolitical tensions, such as those in the Strait of Hormuz, impact market stability?
  • What is the true extent of institutional safe-haven demand?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by CNBC.

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