
Missiles Near Israel’s Nuclear Facility, Hormuz Blocked for Three Weeks, and ES Futures Below the 200-Day for the First Time Since October
Saturday’s Iranian ballistic missiles struck Dimona and Arad, wounding 180 people near Israel’s Shimon Peres Negev Nuclear Research Center. Israeli interceptors launched and failed. Two warheads weighing hundreds of kilograms made direct impact, collapsing a building in Dimona. The IAEA confirmed no damage to the nuclear facility itself and no abnormal radiation readings. But the military and psychological impact of ballistic missiles landing near a nuclear research site, with interceptors failing to stop them, changes the calculus for every risk desk recalculating exposure Monday morning.
This is now Day 23 of the US-Israel military conflict with Iran. The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively blocked since February 28, shutting off approximately 20 million barrels per day, roughly 20% of global seaborne oil trade, for three consecutive weeks. WTI crude touched $100.22 intraday Friday and is heading for its fifth straight weekly gain. Brent is trading between $106 and $113. Gold hit $4,645. Money market funds reached a record $7.856 trillion. And on Friday, ES closed 112 points below the 200-day moving average at 6,619, the first close below that level since October 2025.
IEA Chief Birol, Sunday Evening
“The situation is worse than the two oil crises of the 1970s combined.” The “global economy faces a major threat today.” Fuel shortages are “an increasing problem in Asia.” Japan is spending 800 billion yen from budget reserves to curb gasoline prices. Malaysia’s fuel subsidy bill jumped to $811 million. The UK Prime Minister called an emergency economic meeting.
What $93.9 Billion in Expired Gamma Means for Monday
Triple witching destroyed the options positioning that had been anchoring dealer behavior for weeks. Roughly $93.9 billion in gamma exposure rolled off when Friday’s $4.7 trillion options expiration cleared, and that gamma was not neutral. It was concentrated at strikes between 6,600 and 6,700 SPX, the same zone where price spent most of the past two weeks. Dealers who had been hedging those positions were providing structural support, buying dips and selling rallies in a way that compressed volatility around those strikes. That structural support is gone.
The gamma index closed Friday at -4.097, the deepest negative reading of the entire March selloff. Negative gamma notional stood at -$1.189 billion. The stability meter dropped to 11% into the close, with negative gamma concentrated heavily at the 6,700 and 6,600 strikes. But here is the critical distinction: with OPEX clearing the book, Monday’s gamma environment resets. The 0DTE gamma exposure that dominated Friday vanishes, and Monday’s dealer positioning will be determined entirely by whatever new positions get opened this week.
This reset creates a two-sided dynamic. Moves will be less mechanically amplified than they were Thursday and Friday. A morning short-covering bounce has a better chance of holding for 30 to 45 minutes before sellers reload. But the structural support that kept price from falling through 6,600 SPX two weeks ago no longer exists. The gravitational anchors are gone, and the combo strikes that remain, at 6,600, 6,547, 6,507, 6,501, 6,474, 6,448, 6,402, and 6,303, all sit below Friday’s close.
The War Has Become the Single Variable That Matters
Every other input, the Fed’s hawkish hold at 3.75%, hot PPI at 0.7% monthly, broken moving averages, is secondary to what happens between Washington, Tehran, and the Strait of Hormuz.
Trump issued a 48-hour ultimatum to Iran: reopen the Strait or the US will “obliterate” Iran’s power plants. When pressed on the timeline, he responded: “You’re gonna find out soon. It’s gonna be very good. Total decimation of Iran.” Treasury Secretary Bessent stated the US “may need to escalate to de-escalate.” US officials told Israeli counterparts that America may have no alternative but to launch a ground operation to seize Kharg Island, the facility that handles 90% of Iran’s oil exports. Israel is “interested in wide-scale attacks on Iran’s energy facilities and backs the 48-hour ultimatum.”
Iran’s response has been equally escalatory. The IRGC declared that if energy facilities are targeted, “energy facilities in countries that host US bases will be lawful targets,” directly threatening Saudi Arabian, Emirati, Qatari, and Bahraini oil infrastructure. Iran’s Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf went further: “US Treasury bonds are soaked in Iranians’ blood. Purchase them, and you purchase a strike on your HQ and assets.” Late Sunday evening, explosions were reported in several parts of Tehran itself, signaling that active military operations are continuing and expanding in real time.
The intelligence picture is shifting. Netanyahu reportedly relied on Mossad’s optimism about an uprising in Iran to convince Trump that a change of government was realistic. US intelligence now suggests hardliners will remain in power. The IDF chief stated the fight with Hezbollah has “only just begun,” confirming a multi-front war. Saudi Aramco’s CEO canceled his CERAWeek trip due to the conflict.
The 6,475 Expiration Problem
The JPMorgan quarterly collar put strike at 6,475 SPX has acted as a gravitational center for the past two weeks. Price bounced off it on Friday when SPX tagged the level exactly. Dealer hedging flows associated with that position provided measurable support every time SPX approached it. Institutional flow analysis confirmed desks were adding put butterflies at the 6,500 to 6,475 zone, betting on continued weakness into month-end.
That collar expires on March 31, eight trading days from Monday. When it expires, the hedging support it provides vanishes the same way OPEX cleared $93.9 billion in gamma. The 6,475 level goes from structural support to a number on a chart.
Seventy thousand VIX April 40 calls traded last week, creating a feedback loop that accelerates any selloff. VIX rises, those calls gain delta, dealers hedge by buying VIX futures, which pushes VIX higher, which makes the calls gain more delta. Meanwhile, 78,000 SPY put spreads targeting 625, roughly SPX 6,250, with a March 27 expiration represent a deep-pockets directional bet on 250 more points of downside within five trading days. RSI at 29.88 is technically oversold, but ADX at 34.57 with -DI dominating at 40.56 confirms a strong directional trend, not a mean-reversion setup. The Dow just posted its first four-week losing streak since 2023.
Friday Close and Key Levels
| Level | Significance |
|---|---|
| 6,690-6,710 | Thursday’s Globex high zone. Not expected under current conditions. |
| 6,643-6,655 | Friday’s OPEX high, computed pivot R2. Would require a significant positive headline. |
| 6,620-6,631 | Computed pivot R1 and 200-DMA zone. Upper bound of any realistic Monday bounce. |
| 6,580-6,596 | Value area high from Friday. First bounce target and short entry zone. |
| 6,540-6,545 | Value area low. Sunday Globex testing here. Immediate support. |
| 6,521-6,530 | JPM collar equivalent zone. Most important structural level in the market. Has held twice. |
| 6,494-6,501 | 4H extension target aligned with computed pivot S1. |
| 6,470 | Computed pivot S2. Deep support, 4H discount zone. |
| 6,419 | Computed pivot S3. Extreme downside, major escalation scenario only. |
March 31 is circled on every institutional calendar, and the eight days between now and then will determine whether the safety net holds or whether the market discovers what exists beneath it.
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