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Proflex Jun 15–19 — Record Expiry, Hawkish Fed, NVDA Bond Sale


Proflex Market Update - Week Jun 15 - Jun 19, 2026

Record $8.3T Expiry | Warsh's Hawkish Debut | Iran Truce, Reversible | Semis at the Turn

"The market spent this week climbing a wall it built itself, pulling out the Fed's dovishness, the biggest options floor in history, and the geopolitical all-clear, all at once. It held. The question is what holds it up next."
Proflex Panel

A new Fed chair walked in and told markets the cuts they'd been waiting for aren't coming and stocks fell, then climbed straight back.

Kevin Warsh's first FOMC meeting delivered a hawkish dot plot, the largest options expiration in history rolled off the board, and a fragile Iran truce flickered on and off all week.


Through all of it, the S&P closed +1.08% on Thursday and notched its 11th winning week in twelve, with the Nasdaq leading on a semiconductor bid.

Markets were closed Friday for Juneteenth, so the tape effectively ran Monday to Thursday and every stabilizer that carried 2026's rally is now being removed at the same moment.

That's the tension. VIX sat near 16, Brent eased to ~$80 from its ~$98 conflict peak, and risk appetite looks intact.

But the dovish Fed is gone, the dealer gamma that dampened every dip just expired, and the war "resolution" is one social-media post away from unraveling.

Calm tape, thinning support. Here's where the signal is.



Key Drivers This Week


Record $8.3T Quad-Witching: The Floor We Warned About: Now 60% Bigger

In March we flagged the ~$5 trillion triple-witching as the structural floor that could drop once dealer hedging "unrolled" after the close.

This June, that floor was $8.3 trillion — the largest options expiration in history, roughly 18% above the prior ~$7.1 trillion record (December 2025) and about 60% larger than March's expiry.

It rolled off Thursday, June 18, pulled forward a day by the Juneteenth holiday.

The mechanism matters more than the headline.

A large share of dealer gamma: the positioning that quietly absorbs volatility and keeps dips orderly disappeared with that expiry.

Citadel Securities' Scott Rubner framed the aftermath bluntly: "flows matter more than fundamentals" in the near term, with pension-fund rebalancing converging into the same two-week window.

With the stabilizer gone, the market becomes more sensitive to flows as investors rebuild exposure into month-end.

Proflex View: The market held positive through the largest expiry ever, a genuine show of strength. But strength into an expiry and strength after it are different things. The scaffolding is down. Don't read this week's calm as the new regime; watch how the tape trades the first few sessions of next week, once positioning has to stand on its own.

Warsh's Hawkish Debut: The Dot Plot Flips

Kevin Warsh chaired his first FOMC meeting on June 17 and held the funds rate at 3.50–3.75% in a unanimous 12–0 vote. The hold was never the story — the dot plot was.

The committee removed its prior easing bias entirely: zero cuts now penciled for 2026 (down from one in March), and 9 of 18 members now project at least one rate hike.

Inflation forecasts were revised up to 3.6% headline / 3.3% core, with May CPI already running at 4.2% — the hottest since 2023, driven by the energy shock.

Markets sold off Wednesday, then reversed Thursday as chips and cyclicals carried the tape.

CME FedWatch puts roughly 80% odds on a hold at the July 29 meeting.


Warsh is known to favor less Fedspeak than his predecessor but the blackout is over and five officials (Williams, Goolsbee, Waller, Kashkari, Barkin) are on the docket next week.

Proflex View: This is the cleanest hawkish repricing we've seen all year: the Fed has explicitly traded "when do we cut" for "do we hike." Equities shrugged because earnings and the AI bid are doing the heavy lifting, not because the rate path got easier. If the speakers next week ratify the dots, the burden on Q2 earnings to justify valuations goes up sharply.

The Islamabad Truce: Real Peace or a Reversible Headline?

The Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding was signed June 17: a 14-point framework with a 60-day ceasefire, a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, an end to the US naval blockade, and sanctions relief, brokered by Pakistan with Qatar, Saudi, Turkey and Egypt.

By June 21, first-round talks in Switzerland produced a "roadmap to a final deal within 60 days," with VP JD Vance reporting "great progress."

Then the cracks.

Lebanon is the fault line: Iran briefly declared the Strait closed again on June 20 over continued Israeli operations, even as its own Foreign Ministry said shipping was "operating normally" (CENTCOM counted 55 transits June 21).

Trump warned he'd "hit Iran very hard again… only harder" if proxies weren't reined in; Israel's Israel Katz said there is "no restriction" on IDF action in southern Lebanon.

We've said for weeks that oil is the real scoreboard and Brent at ~$80, down ~36% from the $98 peak, is voting for resolution. Analysts puts Hormuz normalization by August at ~58%.

Proflex View: The MOU is a headline, not yet a settlement. The market is pricing the base case: traffic flows, oil stays in the $75–82 band and it's probably right. But this remains a binary that can gap overnight on a single post or strike. The de-confliction cell on Lebanon is the variable to watch; that's where this either holds or breaks.

Semis: Reversal or Head-Fake?

The chip complex was this week's market: Semis led the Thursday snap-back and dragged the Nasdaq up nearly 2%.

The bid has real fundamentals behind it.

NVIDIA priced a $25 billion bond sale on June 15
its first high-grade offering since 2021 and the book was 3.5x oversubscribed, forcing a raise from the $20B target.

That's the bond market funding AI capex at scale.

All eyes now turn to Micron, reporting Wednesday, June 24 — the cleanest read on the memory cycle.

Consensus sits near $19.7B revenue at ~81% gross margins, with DRAM contract pricing reportedly up 58–63% and Goldman pegging the 2026 DRAM supply-demand gap at 4.9%: the widest in 15 years. HBM supply for the year is fully contracted.

Proflex View: This looks more like a reversal than a head-fake: the fundamentals (pricing, supply tightness, investment-grade demand) line up behind the price action, which is exactly the "earnings bar" setup we've described returns now come from names that clear the bar, not from owning the theme. Micron Wednesday is the tell. A beat-and-raise confirms the cycle; soft guidance turns this week's leadership into a trap, with no gamma cushion underneath it.

Institutional Positioning Into Month-End: BoA's Asymmetric Setup

Beneath the calm tape, the positioning math turned lopsided.

Bank of America's systematic models now see a rebound in CTA exposure but with the upside drained out:

+$13bn of buying in a flat market (down from +$35bn last week)

−$21bn of selling in an "up" market (a flip from +$27bn of buying, as higher vol changes the trigger), and −$95bn of selling in a "down" market (vs −$98bn).

Translation: the firepower that would chase a rally has shrunk, while the selling that would hit a decline barely budged. The downside stays asymmetric.

That collides with a dense calendar.

May PCE: the Fed's traditional preferred inflation gauge — lands Thursday, June 25, alongside final Q1 GDP, May durable goods and jobless claims, with June flash PMIs, UMich sentiment and new-home sales rounding out the week.

Treasury auctions 2-, 5- and 7-year notes Tuesday through Thursday, and FedEx (Jun 23) plus the Fed's bank stress-test results add to the load.

Proflex View: Expired gamma plus asymmetric systematic positioning plus a hot PCE risk is a setup that rewards discipline over chasing. We're not bearish: the trend and the AI bid are intact but this is a week to let the tape prove itself rather than front-run it. A cool PCE extends the melt-up; a hot one finds no floor.

🔍 What We're Watching

  • Micron earnings (Wed, Jun 24): The memory-cycle confirmation or the leadership trap
  • May PCE (Thu, Jun 25): Does the Fed's hawkish pivot get validated by the data
  • Hormuz / Lebanon de-confliction: The variable that keeps the truce alive or breaks it
  • First post-expiry sessions: How the tape trades with the gamma floor gone

🧭 Proflex Playbook – Discipline in an Stretched Rally

With War in Intermediation, Institutional Reversal, International market selloff, we see the market to absorb signification shocks. But the speed of this move demands respect, not complacency.

Our conviction stays anchored in the data:

  • Focus on Structural Growth: Continue to overweight the secular AI theme, recognizing its multi-year runway.
  • Anticipate Shallow Corrections: Use dips as accumulation opportunities, not reasons for fear, understanding that "none of the corrections stick."
  • Diversify Thoughtfully: Recognize the "decorrelation" across asset classes; consider gold, silver and Bitcoin for portfolio resilience.
  • Develop Mental Models: Prioritize long-term planning (6-12 months out) over short-term news, aiming for consistent, incremental gains.


If you're an All-Access or Managed Portfolio subscriber, our positioning has already shifted ahead of this moment—scaling up asymmetric hard asset plays while hedging for earnings volatility and geopolitical tail risks.


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Until next week,

— The Proflex Team
Trusted Macro Insights. Calm Investing. Tactical Trades.

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