IAU dropped 5% on the week to $84.32, yet options traders haven't flinched — the most striking feature of this week's setup is the gap between price action and derivatives positioning.
The options signal remains the dominant story. Call bias is at its most extreme in a year, with the put/call ratio at 0.167 — the 52-week low, now two-and-a-half standard deviations below its 20-day average of 0.183. That reading is essentially unchanged from yesterday's published note, which means the weekly price decline has not prompted any defensive repositioning in the options market. For every six calls traded, just one put changes hands. That is not a drift from the mean; it is a sustained departure.
The borrow market has shifted slightly since yesterday's note. Cost to borrow nearly doubled on the week, reaching 0.46% — up from 0.24% last week and the highest reading in the 30-day window, though still extremely low in absolute terms. Short interest edged down 2.5% on the day to 1.03% of free float, trimming slightly from the 1.06% reported as of May 18. The week-on-week rise in SI remains roughly 4%. The borrow story has not changed in character: availability is 3,068% — meaning around 118 million shares sit available to lend against just 8.5 million currently shorted. The lending pool remains effectively unlimited, and the CTB spike looks more like daily noise than a structural tightening.
Institutional positioning reflects broad-based ownership across wealth management platforms. UBS Asset Management added roughly 7.6 million shares in the March quarter — one of the larger additions among the top 15 holders. LPL Financial and Envestnet both trimmed materially in the same period, with LPL cutting 3.6 million shares and Envestnet shedding over 10 million. The ORTEX short score holds at 28, a low reading that has been remarkably stable over the past two weeks, consistent with no meaningful build in short conviction despite the price weakness.
The week's price decline is worth contextualising against what has been a strong run for gold. IAU is still down just over 7% in the past month, but the broader gold rally that drove the ETF to prior highs has left a base of call positioning that has not unwound even as spot prices pulled back. Whether that call structure reflects hedged long positions rolling forward or fresh directional bets is the question worth watching as the week closes.
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