Volatility views: Investors are rethinking longer-dated volatility

Market views

For the past several years, US stock investors have hedged their portfolios largely by looking at their calendars. Fed meetings, CPI prints, elections – whenever an event appeared on the horizon, investors would look to short-dated options to protect against the possibility of volatility.

Volatility views: Investors are rethinking longer-dated volatility

More recently though, that playbook has become less effective. Since last year, some of the biggest volatility events have been harder to pin to specific dates. That’s because they’ve been driven less by the calendar, and more by geopolitics, policy uncertainty, and liquidity shocks. When it strikes, volatility has also tended to persist rather than snap back quickly.

“In contrast to periods like August 2024, where long-volatility positions technically worked but spot reverted too quickly, 2025 saw longer-lasting moves with better liquidity, allowing hedges to actually realize P&L,” says Robby Knopp, co-head of the S&P options desk at Optiver.

That experience has influenced investor behavior. Demand for one- to two-year protection has increased, according to Hugo Bernaldo, senior cross-asset derivatives trader at Optiver. Through the second half of 2025, mid-curve and back-end S&P 500 volatility stayed firm, even as the index rallied. Those elevated levels have carried into early 2026, as shown in the chart below. For many investors, longer-dated volatility is no longer an afterthought.

Page link template

Disclaimer

Optiver V.O.F. (‘Optiver’) is a market maker licensed by the Dutch Authority for Financial Markets to engage in the investment activity of dealing on own account. This communication and all information contained herein, including any attachments, are confidential and intended solely for the use of the individual addressee(s) or, on a need to know basis, their employees and directly appointed agents. This document is for informational purposes only. It is not a recommendation to engage in investment activities and must not be relied upon when making any investment decisions. This document has been provided to you without charge for your convenience only. All information contained in this material is factual information and does not reflect any opinion or judgement of Optiver. This document does not take into account the investment objectives or financial situation of any particular third-party. All investments involve risk and no portion of this document should be interpreted as legal, financial, tax, or accounting advice, and should not be construed as an offer to buy or sell, or a solicitation to buy or sell any future, option, swap, or other derivative or financial instrument. There are no warranties, expressed or implied, as to the accuracy or completeness of any information provided herein. Optiver does not warrant or guarantee the accuracy of any information or opinions in this document. Any trading activity conducted with Optiver shall at all times be subject to the current Optiver Terms of Business. Please contact your Optiver representative for a copy of the latest version of these terms of business.

Related articles

View all

In a series of articles, we’re exploring the development of single-stock options markets across the APAC region. Our aim is to highlight the many uses of the products as well as factors that may be acting as barriers to growth.

While Brazil’s securities borrowing and lending framework has its strengths, it still trails global peers. In this paper, we propose steps to modernize the country’s SBL system, without compromising safety.

Why trade execution still matters

Market structure

UK and EU regulators are set to reverse historic ‘unbundling’ rules. But while the rules were imperfect, we believe real strides were made in getting investors to pay attention to trading costs. Now more than ever, traders need to carefully choose the right execution partners and strategy.

More abundant and deeper liquidity in cleared swaps markets is achievable with incremental changes and targeted adjustments to rules governing swaps trading. This paper explores practical policy recommendations to achieve this goal.

PFOF is going away, but the problem isn’t

Market structure

Ahead of upcoming MiFID rules that ban PFOF, some firms are introducing new structures that directly link single market-maker venues with affiliated brokers. These structures offer even less competition for retail order flow than their predecessors.

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), trading exchanges and other agricultural-related publications have published several articles recently regarding the Mississippi River’s water levels.[1] In this paper, we join them in highlighting the tremendous importance of the Mississippi to the US economy, as well as exploring the relationship between its water levels and agricultural derivatives markets.

Click below

Learn more about Optiver