Monexplora, Founded by Indonesian Financial Researcher Mike Wiprana, Breaks Down What Retail Investors in Southeast Asia Need to Understand Right Now
ALFORTVILLE, France - March 24, 2026 - PRLog -- The Nasdaq Composite is down roughly 2.5% year-to-date, and the CBOE Volatility Index has surged more than 35% over the past month, touching 31.77 on March 9 before settling near the 26–27 range this week. For retail investors accustomed to the calm of the previous bull market, the shift has been jarring. Monexplora, the Southeast Asia-focused financial analysis and education platform founded by Mike Wiprana, explains what is actually driving the turbulence — and what investors should understand before reacting.
The Mechanics Behind the Chaos
On March 20, markets faced "Quadruple Witching" — the quarterly simultaneous expiration of stock index futures, options, and single-stock contracts. This March's event involved approximately $5.7 trillion in notional contracts, according to Investing.com, making it the largest March expiration on record. The result was predictable for those who understand options markets: concentrated institutional position-closing created sharp, disorderly intraday swings that had little to do with underlying fundamentals.
Central to this dynamic is what traders call a "gamma trap." When market makers who sold put options are forced to sell the underlying stock to hedge their exposure, price declines accelerate — temporarily, but dramatically. This is not random volatility. It is a structural feature of how large options books unwind near expiration.
What the VIX Is — and Is Not — Telling You
The VIX measures implied volatility priced into S&P 500 options over the next 30 days. When it crossed 30 on March 9, and the CNN Fear & Greed Index registered approximately 19.97 in mid-March, markets were signaling genuine fear. But elevated implied volatility also means expensive options premiums. Buying protective puts at a VIX of 30 costs meaningfully more than at 15. Reacting without understanding this distinction turns a hedge into a panic purchase.
Meanwhile, the broader shift is structural: the technology sector has lost its leadership role, with the Nasdaq posting its worst monthly performance since early 2025, while energy and consumer staples have outperformed. This is a regime change, not a dip — and it calls for a different analytical framework entirely.
About Monexplora
Monexplora is an innovative financial information and market analysis platform founded by Indonesian financial researcher Mike Wiprana, helping Southeast Asian investors access institutional-level market intelligence through news, research, education, and AI-assisted data insights. Past performance and educational examples do not guarantee future results. All investing involves risk. https://www.monexplora.com/
Photos: (Click photo to enlarge)
Source: Monexplora
Read Full Story - Monexplora Explains the Options Mechanics Behind March's Tech Selloff and VIX Surge | More news from this source
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ALFORTVILLE, France - March 24, 2026 - PRLog -- The Nasdaq Composite is down roughly 2.5% year-to-date, and the CBOE Volatility Index has surged more than 35% over the past month, touching 31.77 on March 9 before settling near the 26–27 range this week. For retail investors accustomed to the calm of the previous bull market, the shift has been jarring. Monexplora, the Southeast Asia-focused financial analysis and education platform founded by Mike Wiprana, explains what is actually driving the turbulence — and what investors should understand before reacting.
The Mechanics Behind the Chaos
On March 20, markets faced "Quadruple Witching" — the quarterly simultaneous expiration of stock index futures, options, and single-stock contracts. This March's event involved approximately $5.7 trillion in notional contracts, according to Investing.com, making it the largest March expiration on record. The result was predictable for those who understand options markets: concentrated institutional position-closing created sharp, disorderly intraday swings that had little to do with underlying fundamentals.
Central to this dynamic is what traders call a "gamma trap." When market makers who sold put options are forced to sell the underlying stock to hedge their exposure, price declines accelerate — temporarily, but dramatically. This is not random volatility. It is a structural feature of how large options books unwind near expiration.
What the VIX Is — and Is Not — Telling You
The VIX measures implied volatility priced into S&P 500 options over the next 30 days. When it crossed 30 on March 9, and the CNN Fear & Greed Index registered approximately 19.97 in mid-March, markets were signaling genuine fear. But elevated implied volatility also means expensive options premiums. Buying protective puts at a VIX of 30 costs meaningfully more than at 15. Reacting without understanding this distinction turns a hedge into a panic purchase.
Meanwhile, the broader shift is structural: the technology sector has lost its leadership role, with the Nasdaq posting its worst monthly performance since early 2025, while energy and consumer staples have outperformed. This is a regime change, not a dip — and it calls for a different analytical framework entirely.
About Monexplora
Monexplora is an innovative financial information and market analysis platform founded by Indonesian financial researcher Mike Wiprana, helping Southeast Asian investors access institutional-level market intelligence through news, research, education, and AI-assisted data insights. Past performance and educational examples do not guarantee future results. All investing involves risk. https://www.monexplora.com/
Photos: (Click photo to enlarge)
Source: Monexplora
Read Full Story - Monexplora Explains the Options Mechanics Behind March's Tech Selloff and VIX Surge | More news from this source
Press release distribution by PRLog