At 4:00 PM Central European Time, Alphabet's market capitalization reached $4.7 trillion. That's more than the combined GDP of Germany ($4.4T), France ($3.0T), and Italy ($2.2T) together. Meanwhile, the VIX, Wall Street's fear gauge, dropped to 17.85 — the lowest level since January.
What Happened
After earnings in late April, Alphabet had one of its strongest months since 2004. Cloud grew 35%, Google Search remained stable despite Apple's AI integration with Gemini, and Anthropic committed $200 billion over five years to Google Cloud. The stock trades at $382 for Class C shares, just below the all-time high of $385.69 from May 1st.
The VIX, which measures expected volatility over the next 30 days, sits at 17.85. That's 0.78% lower than yesterday and signals: the market expects no turbulence. Put-selling dominates options flow. SPY puts with a 740 strike saw 740,000 contracts yesterday — almost all sold protection, not bought.
The Options Side
On the GOOGL options chain, the picture is clear: call open interest dominates with a 2.3:1 ratio versus puts. For weekly options expiring May 15th, the most-traded strike is $385 — just 0.8% above the current price. That's classic bull speculation with minimal downside protection.
Implied volatility for GOOGL options sits at 27.88%, slightly below the historical average of 29.4%. Translation: options are cheap. Anyone who bought put spreads three months ago is sitting on worthless contracts. Anyone who sold them collected the premium and is smiling.
A VIX below 18 is historically a warning signal. Over the past ten years, a VIX below 17 was followed by a spike above 25 within 60 days in 68% of cases. The last three times the VIX fell below 18 — November 2025, June 2025, January 2025 — short-term corrections of 3–5% followed.
What Traders Are Watching Now
The 380 strike on GOOGL holds the highest put open interest. If the stock falls below $380, part of the gamma hedging mechanism kicks in, potentially triggering further selling. The next support level sits at $372, the 50-day moving average.
In the options market, the rule is: when nobody's hedging, that itself is a risk. A VIX at 17.85 means put premiums are cheap — perfect for defensive strategies like put spreads or collar constructions. Anyone buying a 380/370 put spread today (expiry end of June) pays around $2.40 for $10 of downside protection — a 4:1 risk-reward.
The question isn't whether Alphabet is overvalued. The question is: what happens when the VIX rises again? Put prices explode, and anyone without protection pays ten times more.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past performance is not an indicator of future results.
