IVV enters the week having reclaimed 2% in five sessions — but the options market is screaming something the price action has barely begun to reflect.
The most striking development is in options positioning. The put/call ratio collapsed to 0.70 on Tuesday, more than three standard deviations below its 20-day average of 1.11. That is the most aggressively bullish reading in options flow for IVV in over a year — the 52-week low sits at 0.43, and Tuesday's print is closing in fast. Traders are not hedging. They are buying calls at a pace that stands out sharply against a backdrop where PCR had been running above 1.10 for most of the prior six weeks. The shift happened in a single session, following weeks of elevated defensive positioning.
The lending market offers a supporting signal, but it is a minor one. Short interest roughly doubled over the past month, from around 4.5 million shares to just under 15 million — a 215% jump in reported short shares. At 1.4% of free float, this is not a crowded short by any standard, but the pace of the build is notable for a benchmark ETF. Despite that increase, borrow availability remains extremely loose: the lending pool is barely touched, with only a fraction of available shares on loan. Cost to borrow is just 0.27% annualised, even after a 47% week-on-week uptick. The ORTEX short score of 29 is consistent with minimal short-selling pressure. The lending market is not telling a squeeze story. It is confirming that the recent SI increase is tactical hedging, not a structural short position.
Fund flow data adds further texture to the week's rotation. U.S.-focused equity ETFs pulled in over $35 billion net in the past week, by far the largest regional inflow globally. Information Technology ETFs led sector flows with nearly $3.7 billion net. By contrast, Financials and Consumer Discretionary both saw net outflows — $830 million and $487 million respectively. The pattern fits: money is moving back into growth and away from defensive or rate-sensitive cyclicals, which aligns with the options-market pivot away from hedging.
The institutional holder base is broad and largely passive. BlackRock alone holds nearly 7.7% of shares. Envestnet added over 6.6 million shares in its most recent filing and Northwestern Mutual added roughly 760,000. Millennium Management, notable as a more active player, added nearly 7 million shares in the period ending December 2025. There are no insider dynamics relevant to an ETF, but the holder mix — spanning wirehouses, RIAs, and active managers alongside the passive anchor — means IVV flows are themselves a proxy for how professional allocators are repositioning the broad market.
The price recovery is real: IVV closed at $741.61, up 2% on the week and 8.6% over the past month. Yet Tuesday's session closed barely changed, down 0.15%, even as that same session produced the most bullish options flow reading of the year. That divergence — flat price, surging call demand — is the tension worth watching: whether follow-through buying materialises to validate the options signal, or whether Tuesday's call surge proves a one-day flush of protective hedges being unwound rather than a fresh directional bet.
See the live data behind this article on ORTEX.
Open IVV on ORTEX →ORTEX Market Intelligence content is generated by AI from a snapshot of ORTEX's proprietary data. Content is informational only and does not constitute investment advice.