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Traders Just Made A $1.3 Million Bet Against Junk Bonds

Published Jun 19, 2026
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Summary:
  • An options trader paid $1.3 million for 20,000 puts on HYG, the biggest junk-bond fund, betting the price falls by early 2027.
  • Puts outnumbered calls five to one, with 190,000 of the 226,000 HYG options traded that day being puts.
  • Falling oil and a new Fed chair are the leading suspects behind the bearish turn.

Junk bonds have been one of the calmest corners of the market.

On Thursday, traders piled their chips on that calm breaking.

The Trade

The action showed up in HYG, the biggest fund that holds junk bonds. Junk bonds are loans to firms with weak credit.

They pay more interest because there is a bigger chance you do not get paid back. That extra risk is the whole point.

Investors usually buy junk bonds when they feel bold. They dump them when they get scared.

One trader paid $1.3 million for 20,000 puts on the fund. A put is a simple bet that a price will fall.

Those puts run all the way to January 2027 and are tied to a strike of 75. If HYG drops below that, they pay off.

The flow was lopsided, with puts outnumbering calls five to one. Of the 226,000 HYG options traded that day, 190,000 were bets on a drop.

Every morning, Market Briefs turns trades like this into plain English in five minutes - and joining gets you a free investing masterclass.

The Fed Connection

The timing points to the Fed. This was the first meeting under new Chair Kevin Warsh.

A new boss can scramble the old rules traders lean on. That alone can make people nervous.

"For the previous 20 years, bond traders had been given a script to follow," said Zed Francis of the firm Convexitas. With that script gone, he said, traders "have to do their homework again."

He thinks that could spark a "buyer's strike for a bit." In plain terms, buyers may step back and wait.

No one knows the exact trigger yet. But the Fed shift is the top guess.

The Oil Angle

There is a second suspect: oil. Crude has fallen to its lowest level since March.

Just weeks ago, oil was spiking on war fears. Now the trend has flipped.

The drop came after the US and Iran reached a peace deal. That hits junk bonds, since more than 11% of HYG sits in energy firms.

Energy firms borrow a lot to drill and ship. When oil falls, their debt looks shakier.

That makes their bonds a bigger worry. Cheap oil is great at the pump, but not for these lenders.

The most popular trade of the day was an August put. Traders bought 40,000 of them at about 39 cents each.

At $39 a contract, the bet is cheap. But it only pays off if the fund drops about 4%.

What To Watch

Junk bonds are the canary in the coal mine for risk. They twitch first when traders get jumpy about the wider market.

So far, the wider market looks calm. These bets suggest some traders expect that to change.

The next few weeks will show who is right. For now, the smart money is hedging.

If you want trades like this decoded every weekday, join the investors reading Market Briefs and get a free 45-minute investing course as a bonus.

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