The JPMorgan Hedged Equity collar is the single largest systematic options structure in the U.S. equity market. It is updated every three months with about 35,000 SPX contracts and around $22 billion in value for each part, acting like a set system that determines support, resistance, and how much the market fluctuates for that quarter.</sent Q1 2026 expired March 31 with a violent unwind at 6,475. The Q2 structure is now live: a 5,210 / 6,180 put spread versus a 6,865 short call, expiring at the June quarter-end. This note explains the mechanics, the dealer flow implications, and the key levels that will govern price action through June.

What the JPM Collar Is

JPMorgan Asset Management runs a family of funds under the Hedged Equity complex, the flagship being JHEQX. The mandate is straightforward: own a diversified S&P 500 portfolio and protect against catastrophic drawdowns using a quarterly options collar. The fund currently manages approximately $18 billion in S&P 500 equity exposure.

The collar is constructed from three options legs, executed simultaneously at the quarterly roll:

Leg 1 — Long Put (Protection) JPM buys an out-of-the-money SPX put. This is the primary hedge. If the S&P 500 falls sharply, the put gains value and offsets losses in the equity book. The strike is set near-the-money at the time of the roll, typically 3–5% below spot.

Leg 2 — Short Put (Cost Offset) JPM sells a deeper out-of-the-money put to partially finance the long put premium. This creates a put spread rather than a naked put, capping the maximum hedge payout but significantly reducing net cost.

Leg 3 — Short Call (Premium Financing) JPM sells an out-of-the-money call above spot. The premium received from this sale funds the remaining cost of the put spread. The result is a near-zero net premium structure — the hedge is effectively self-financing. The trade-off is a hard cap on quarterly upside.

The scale is what makes this trade systemically relevant. Each leg involves approximately 35,000 SPX index contracts. At an index level of 6,500, each contract carries $650,000 in notional exposure. The total notional per leg approaches $22.7 billion — larger than the daily volume of most individual equities and sufficient to materially influence dealer positioning across the entire S&P 500 options complex.


Why It Moves Markets — Dealer Gamma Mechanics

The collar itself does not move markets. What moves markets is the hedging behavior of the dealers who take the other side of each leg.

When JPM buys the long put, a dealer becomes short that put. A short put carries negative gamma. To remain delta-neutral, the dealer must continuously adjust their futures position as the underlying moves. The direction of that adjustment is procyclical — it amplifies whatever the market is already doing.

Above the put strike: The put is out of the money. Its delta is small and negative. The dealer's offsetting long delta hedge is modest. As SPX rises further from the strike, the dealer's hedge requirement shrinks — they buy back futures, adding marginal upside pressure. The strike acts as a mechanical floor.

Below the put strike: The put moves into the money. Its delta accelerates toward -1. The dealer must sell increasing quantities of futures to stay hedged. Every tick lower forces more selling. The mechanical floor becomes a mechanical accelerant.

This dynamic is captured in the Gamma Exposure (GEX) metric—the dollar value of futures a dealer must trade per 1% move in the underlying The JPM put strike consistently registers as the largest single-strike GEX concentration in the SPX options market.

The short call leg creates the mirror image dynamic at the upside strike. Dealers long the call hedge by selling futures as SPX rallies toward the strike. The ceiling is equally mechanical.


Q1 2026 — What Happened

The Q1 collar carried a 6,475 long put, approximately 5,310 short put, and 7,155 short call. SPX opened the quarter at 6,878 and peaked at 6,955 in January — never threatening the 7,155 call. The put at 6,475 provided structural support through February and into March.

The structure broke on March 26 during geopolitical escalation. SPX crossed below 6,475, inverting dealer positioning from long to short delta. The mechanical floor became a trapdoor. Total dealer delta exposure (DEX) moved as follows:

Date

Dealer Delta Exposure

Wednesday, March 25

+$37 billion

Thursday, March 26

−$427 billion

Monday, March 30

−$835 billion

Tuesday, March 31 (expiry)

−$47 billion

The −$835 billion reading on March 30 represents the peak of forced mechanical selling. On expiry day, March 31, the position rolled off. The 6,475 strike flipped from −$45 million GEX to +$42.82 million GEX in a single session — an $87 million single-strike swing. SPX rallied 217 points from the Monday low and closed up 3% on the day. The move was mechanical, not fundamental.


Q2 2026 — The New Structure

The Q2 collar was established at the March 31 close. Confirmed structure per VolSignals:

5,210 / 6,180 Put Spread versus 6,865 Short Call — June Quarter-End Expiry

Leg

Q1 Strike (Expired)

Q2 Strike (Live)

Change

Short Call — upside cap

7,155

6,865

−290 points

Long Put — protection floor

6,475

6,180

−295 points

Short Put — cost offset

~5,310

5,210

−100 points

The downward reset reflects the ~5% decline in SPX from the Q1 start (6,878) to the Q1 close (6,503). The collar resets around the prevailing index level at execution.

One structural change of note: the Q2 roll was executed via CME's S&P 500 Month-End (SME) product rather than the standard SPX options chain. SME settles at the 4pm cash close rather than the 9:30am Special Opening Quotation, eliminating NAV tracking error at the fund level. Execution occurs through BTIC (Basis Trade at Index Close), referencing the 4pm fix directly. The downstream dealer hedging flows remain observable in ES futures data regardless of the originating instrument.


Trading Implications for Q2

6,180 — Structural Floor

While SPX trades above 6,180, dealers short the long put maintain a net long delta hedge. They own futures. They buy dips. The support is not sentiment-driven or technically derived — it is a mechanical consequence of dealer positioning at scale. This level should be treated as a structural reference, not a conventional support zone.

6,865 — Structural Ceiling

Dealers long the short call hedge by selling futures as SPX approaches this level from below. Rallies into 6,865 will face systematic selling pressure regardless of macro backdrop. A sustained break above this level would require a catalyst of sufficient magnitude to overwhelm the mechanical flow.

The Zone Between 6,180 and 6,865 — Reduced Mechanical Stabilization

With the long put currently 295 points out of the money from the 6,503 close, gamma is low. Dealers are not actively hedging the position at current spot levels. This has a direct implication for realized volatility: the collar will not dampen intraday moves the way it did in Q1 when 6,475 was near spot. Expect higher realized volatility in the early weeks of Q2 until spot either approaches the put or the call strike.

Below 6,180 — The Trapdoor Scenario

A clean break below 6,180 replicates the March 26 dynamic at a lower level. Dealer positioning inverts from long to short delta. Mechanical selling accelerates the move lower. The put spread structure (versus a naked put) partially dampens this effect — the 5,210 short put below creates an offsetting delta that limits the cascade relative to prior quarters. However, the directional impulse remains significant given the notional scale involved. Any close below 6,180 should be treated as a regime change signal, not a dip-buying opportunity.


Key Levels Summary

Level

Role

Implication

6,865

Short call strike — structural ceiling

Mechanical selling into rallies; hard cap on near-term upside

6,503

Q1 expiry close / current spot reference

Collar reset anchor

6,180

Long put strike — structural floor

Mechanical buying above; trapdoor below

5,210

Short put strike — lower bound

Defines maximum hedge payout; partial delta offset below 6,180


The JPM collar is not a trade to fade — it is a structural feature of the market to navigate around. For Q2, the range is defined: 6,180 on the downside, 6,865 on the upside. Within that range, reduced gamma means less mechanical stabilisation and more room for volatility to run. The collar becomes the dominant market force again only when spot approaches either strike. Until then, the desk should treat 6,180 as the level that matters most — a break there does not trigger a technical stop cascade, it triggers a dealer positioning inversion across $22 billion in notional. That is a different kind of risk.