The VIX fear index touched a three-week high today, closing at 16.55 points, up 2.06 points for the day. On the surface, it appears as a numerical fluctuation, but behind it, political uncertainties, structural market risks, and cracks in the policy framework are fermenting. This is not a sign of economic fundamentals deteriorating, but a direct hedge by investors against the risk to Federal Reserve independence.
Chain Reaction Triggered by Political Storm
How Powell Event Impacts the Market
According to the latest news, the Department of Justice has issued a subpoena to the Federal Reserve to investigate Powell, involving his June 2025 congressional testimony regarding the headquarters renovation project. While the apparent reason seems technical, market reactions are very direct: this is interpreted as political pressure on the Fed Chair.
Powell responded promptly, stating that this move is the government using the issue to pressure for rate cuts, emphasizing independence. Republican Senator Thillis even openly stated that until Powell’s legal issues are resolved, no Fed nominations will be confirmed. This suggests that senior Fed personnel may face a freeze.
Short-term Market Reaction
This legal storm immediately caused asset allocation chaos:
US stock futures weakened, Nasdaq futures down 0.7%
US dollar index declined, safe-haven funds flowing in
Gold broke through $4,600/oz, silver rose over 4%
Safe-haven currencies like the Swiss franc strengthened
The VIX rose accordingly
Market difficulty in judging the interest rate path has sharply increased. Previously, rate cut expectations based on data (initially 6 times at the start of the year, now reduced to 2) suddenly face political variables, prompting investors to hedge against “political uncertainty risk.”
Hidden Structural Bomb
Risks Behind Low Correlation
More concerning is the deep structural issue in the market. According to Goldman Sachs’ latest research, the 3-month average stock correlation in the S&P 500 has fallen to 0.17, the lowest since 2017.
This seemingly calm number actually reflects an extremely polarized market:
The seven tech giants account for over 40% of the S&P 500 market cap, rising strongly
About 40% of S&P 500 components are expected to have negative returns in 2025
Only a few stocks are rising, most are fighting their own battles
UBS derivatives strategist Kieran Diamond warns plainly: implied correlation has fallen to a historic low, increasing the risk of a sharp spike in the VIX. Once macroeconomic factors regain dominance, the extremely low correlation will reverse into very high correlation.
Lessons from Historical Patterns
Historical data clearly shows the power of this reversal:
After correlation dropped to lows in 2017, market volatility surged in 2018
After low correlation in 2019, the pandemic crash in 2020 caused a 34% plunge and correlation soared to 0.80
The current risk is that many hedge funds employ diversified trading strategies (buying individual stock volatility, selling index volatility), betting on low correlation continuing. Once this assumption is broken, the “correlation bomb” will explode.
Chain Reaction in Crypto Markets
Increasing Synchronization with Traditional Market Volatility
Crypto markets are becoming more sensitive to rising VIX. Although Bitcoin’s BVIV index (30-day implied volatility) remains relatively stable around 45%, this itself reflects market preparations for larger swings.
According to the latest news, while the three major US indices closed at record highs on Friday, market sentiment’s fragility is becoming apparent. The correlation between crypto assets and traditional finance tends to rise under pressure, and a surge in VIX usually accompanies increased short-term Bitcoin volatility.
Mild Optimism Among Retail Investors
It’s worth noting that retail investor sentiment is not overheated. The AAII Investor Sentiment Survey shows a 42.5% bullish proportion (only 5 percentage points above the historical average of 37.5%), with a +12.5% bullish-bearish spread, far below the peak of +35% to +40% seen in 2021.
This moderate optimism is actually a fragile balance. Between April and May 2025, the market experienced the most extreme pessimism in five years (60-65% bearish, -42% spread), with VIX breaking above 50. The reversal from extreme pessimism to moderate optimism is supported by fundamentals (tariff easing, rate cuts, stock market hitting new highs), but the foundation remains unstable.
Three Key Areas to Watch Closely
Federal Reserve Policy Continuity: If Powell faces legal troubles or even loses his position, how the successor’s policy tilt will be, will directly influence the pace of rate cuts this year.
Macroeconomic Data Releases: This week’s US CPI data (expected 2.7%) and earnings reports from major banks will test whether the “soft landing” expectation remains robust.
Timing of Correlation Reversal: Whether the current extremely low correlation is approaching a critical point for reversal; once triggered, VIX could rapidly rise to the 25-30 range.
Summary
VIX rose from 14.49 to 16.55, seemingly a small fluctuation, but in fact signaling a shift from “ignoring political risks” to “actively hedging political risks.” This is not panic, but awareness.
The core risk is not an economic recession (fundamentals still support a soft landing), but the erosion of Fed independence and the long-term concern of a policy framework shifting from “data-driven” to “politically driven.” Coupled with extreme market polarization (correlation at 0.17) and hedge fund betting strategies, once trigger points are hit, volatility could far exceed expectations.
Investors need to shift from “enjoying the bull market” to “preparing for volatility.” With retail sentiment still moderate and optimistic, this is an opportune moment to build defensive positions.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
Warning at 16.55: The triple risks behind the surge in VIX are brewing
The VIX fear index touched a three-week high today, closing at 16.55 points, up 2.06 points for the day. On the surface, it appears as a numerical fluctuation, but behind it, political uncertainties, structural market risks, and cracks in the policy framework are fermenting. This is not a sign of economic fundamentals deteriorating, but a direct hedge by investors against the risk to Federal Reserve independence.
Chain Reaction Triggered by Political Storm
How Powell Event Impacts the Market
According to the latest news, the Department of Justice has issued a subpoena to the Federal Reserve to investigate Powell, involving his June 2025 congressional testimony regarding the headquarters renovation project. While the apparent reason seems technical, market reactions are very direct: this is interpreted as political pressure on the Fed Chair.
Powell responded promptly, stating that this move is the government using the issue to pressure for rate cuts, emphasizing independence. Republican Senator Thillis even openly stated that until Powell’s legal issues are resolved, no Fed nominations will be confirmed. This suggests that senior Fed personnel may face a freeze.
Short-term Market Reaction
This legal storm immediately caused asset allocation chaos:
Market difficulty in judging the interest rate path has sharply increased. Previously, rate cut expectations based on data (initially 6 times at the start of the year, now reduced to 2) suddenly face political variables, prompting investors to hedge against “political uncertainty risk.”
Hidden Structural Bomb
Risks Behind Low Correlation
More concerning is the deep structural issue in the market. According to Goldman Sachs’ latest research, the 3-month average stock correlation in the S&P 500 has fallen to 0.17, the lowest since 2017.
This seemingly calm number actually reflects an extremely polarized market:
UBS derivatives strategist Kieran Diamond warns plainly: implied correlation has fallen to a historic low, increasing the risk of a sharp spike in the VIX. Once macroeconomic factors regain dominance, the extremely low correlation will reverse into very high correlation.
Lessons from Historical Patterns
Historical data clearly shows the power of this reversal:
The current risk is that many hedge funds employ diversified trading strategies (buying individual stock volatility, selling index volatility), betting on low correlation continuing. Once this assumption is broken, the “correlation bomb” will explode.
Chain Reaction in Crypto Markets
Increasing Synchronization with Traditional Market Volatility
Crypto markets are becoming more sensitive to rising VIX. Although Bitcoin’s BVIV index (30-day implied volatility) remains relatively stable around 45%, this itself reflects market preparations for larger swings.
According to the latest news, while the three major US indices closed at record highs on Friday, market sentiment’s fragility is becoming apparent. The correlation between crypto assets and traditional finance tends to rise under pressure, and a surge in VIX usually accompanies increased short-term Bitcoin volatility.
Mild Optimism Among Retail Investors
It’s worth noting that retail investor sentiment is not overheated. The AAII Investor Sentiment Survey shows a 42.5% bullish proportion (only 5 percentage points above the historical average of 37.5%), with a +12.5% bullish-bearish spread, far below the peak of +35% to +40% seen in 2021.
This moderate optimism is actually a fragile balance. Between April and May 2025, the market experienced the most extreme pessimism in five years (60-65% bearish, -42% spread), with VIX breaking above 50. The reversal from extreme pessimism to moderate optimism is supported by fundamentals (tariff easing, rate cuts, stock market hitting new highs), but the foundation remains unstable.
Three Key Areas to Watch Closely
Federal Reserve Policy Continuity: If Powell faces legal troubles or even loses his position, how the successor’s policy tilt will be, will directly influence the pace of rate cuts this year.
Macroeconomic Data Releases: This week’s US CPI data (expected 2.7%) and earnings reports from major banks will test whether the “soft landing” expectation remains robust.
Timing of Correlation Reversal: Whether the current extremely low correlation is approaching a critical point for reversal; once triggered, VIX could rapidly rise to the 25-30 range.
Summary
VIX rose from 14.49 to 16.55, seemingly a small fluctuation, but in fact signaling a shift from “ignoring political risks” to “actively hedging political risks.” This is not panic, but awareness.
The core risk is not an economic recession (fundamentals still support a soft landing), but the erosion of Fed independence and the long-term concern of a policy framework shifting from “data-driven” to “politically driven.” Coupled with extreme market polarization (correlation at 0.17) and hedge fund betting strategies, once trigger points are hit, volatility could far exceed expectations.
Investors need to shift from “enjoying the bull market” to “preparing for volatility.” With retail sentiment still moderate and optimistic, this is an opportune moment to build defensive positions.