State Street SPDR S&P 500 Fossil Fuel Reserves Free ETF (SPYX) Expected Move
Expected move estimates the probable price range for a given period based on at-the-money options pricing. It reflects the market consensus for volatility over the selected timeframe.
State Street SPDR S&P 500 Fossil Fuel Reserves Free ETF (SPYX) operates in the Financial Services sector, specifically the Asset Management industry, with a market capitalization near $2.57B, listed on AMEX, carrying a beta of 1.02 to the broader market. The State Street SPDR S&P 500 Fossil Fuel Reserves Free ETF seeks to provide investment results that, before fees and expenses, correspond generally to the total return performance of the S&P 500 Fossil Fuel Reserves Free Index (the "Index")Seeks to allow climate change-conscious investors to align the core of their investment strategy with their values by eliminating companies that own fossil fuel reserves from the S&P 500Serves as a potential replacement for current S&P 500 exposure for investors interested in eliminating fossil fuel reserves from their portfolioLike the S&P 500 Index, the benchmark for this ETF also focuses on US large cap equities public since 2015-12-01.
Snapshot as of May 29, 2026.
- Spot Price
- $62.05
- Expected Move
- 5.3%
- Implied High
- $65.32
- Implied Low
- $58.78
- Front DTE
- 20 days
As of May 29, 2026, State Street SPDR S&P 500 Fossil Fuel Reserves Free ETF (SPYX) has an expected move of 5.28%, a one-standard-deviation implied price range of roughly $58.78 to $65.32 from the current $62.05. Expected move is derived from at-the-money straddle pricing and represents the market's pricing of a ±1σ move. Roughly 68% of outcomes should fall within this range under lognormal assumptions, though empirical markets have fatter tails.
SPYX Strategy Sizing to the Expected Move
With State Street SPDR S&P 500 Fossil Fuel Reserves Free ETF pricing an expected move of 5.28% from $62.05, risk-defined strategies sized to the implied range structurally target the modal outcome distribution. Iron condors with wings at the ±1σ expected move boundaries collect premium against the ~68% probability that spot stays inside the range under lognormal assumptions; strangles set wider at ±1.5σ or ±2σ target the tails but pay smaller per-trade premium. Long-vol structures (long straddles, ratio backspreads) profit when realized move exceeds the implied move, the inverse trade: they bet against the lognormal assumption itself, capitalizing on the empirically fatter equity-return tails.
How to read the SPYX implied-range chart
The shaded range above shows the one-standard-deviation implied price band at each listed expiration, derived from ATM implied volatility scaled to days-to-expiration. The front-tenor expected move is 5.28%, anchoring an implied range of approximately $58.78 to $65.32. Under lognormal assumptions, roughly 68% of outcomes fall inside that band; 95% fall inside ±2σ; 99.7% inside ±3σ. The empirical equity-return distribution has fatter tails than lognormal, so true tail-outcome frequency is moderately higher than these closed-form numbers suggest.
SPYX expected move and event pricing
Expected move widens with √time: a 5% 30-day move corresponds to roughly a 2.5% 7.5-day move and a 10% 120-day move. SPYX term-structure is in backwardation (slope -0.035), so near-dated tenors price in disproportionate vol - usually because of a known event in the front-month window. With IV rank at 25.0%, the implied move is at the low end of the typical SPYX range - cheap optionality for buyers, thin premium for sellers.
Sizing SPYX structures to the expected move
Iron condors with wings at ±1σ collect the modal-outcome premium; ±1.5σ widens probability of inside-range to ~87% but cuts collected premium roughly in half. Strangles do the inverse trade - they pay against the same lognormal distribution, profiting when realized exceeds implied. Calendar spreads bet on the slope of the term structure rather than the level. The expected move is the inputs the chain is pricing, not a forecast - realized moves above or below are normal under any distribution.
Learn how expected move is reported and how to read the data →
Per-expiration expected move for SPYX derived from ATM implied volatility at each listed expiration. Implied high/low bounds are computed as $62.05 × (1 ± expected move %). One standard-deviation range under lognormal assumptions, roughly 68% of outcomes fall inside.
| Expiration | DTE | ATM IV | Expected Move | Implied High | Implied Low |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 18, 2026 | 20 | 18.4% | 4.3% | $64.72 | $59.38 |
| Jul 17, 2026 | 49 | 14.9% | 5.5% | $65.44 | $58.66 |
| Oct 16, 2026 | 140 | 16.0% | 9.9% | $68.20 | $55.90 |
| Jan 15, 2027 | 231 | 16.7% | 13.3% | $70.29 | $53.81 |
Frequently asked SPYX expected move questions
- What is the current SPYX expected move?
- As of May 29, 2026, State Street SPDR S&P 500 Fossil Fuel Reserves Free ETF (SPYX) has an expected move of 5.28% over the next 20 days, implying a one-standard-deviation price range of $58.78 to $65.32 from the current $62.05. The expected move is derived from at-the-money straddle pricing and represents the market consensus for a ±1σ price move.
- What does the SPYX expected move mean for traders?
- Roughly 68% of outcomes should fall within ±1 expected move and 95% within ±2 under lognormal assumptions, though equity returns have empirically fatter tails than log-normal predicts. Strategies sized to the expected move (iron condors at ±1σ, strangles at ±1.5σ) target the typical outcome distribution; strategies that profit from tail moves (long-vol structures, ratio backspreads) target the tails the lognormal model under-prices.
- How is SPYX expected move calculated?
- The expected move displayed here is derived from at-the-money implied volatility scaled to the chosen tenor: expected move % is approximately ATM IV times sqrt(T / 365), where T is days to expiration. An equivalent straddle-based form: the ATM straddle (call + put at the same strike) is roughly sqrt(2/pi) times spot times IV times sqrt(T/365), so the implied one-standard-deviation move is approximately 1.25 times ATM straddle divided by spot. The two formulations agree once the sqrt(2/pi) constant is reconciled.