$S&P 500(.SPX)$ fell as much as 2.5% intraday, $Dow Jones(.DJI)$ once dropped nearly 1,300 points, small caps slid close to 1.8%, and $NASDAQ(.IXIC)$ led the declines among the three major indexes.
$Cboe Volatility Index(VIX)$ spiked sharply, hitting its highest level since April 2025 during the session, signaling a clear rise in risk-off sentiment. The Fear & Greed Index has entered the “Fear” zone.
1. “Negative Gamma” trap could accelerate the selloff?
$S&P 500(.SPX)$ closed at 6816, the critical point. From both technical and options-chain perspectives, 6,800 is market’s lifeline.
When the S&P 500 trades below 6,800, the market enters the so-called “negative gamma” zone. This forces market makers to “sell when it falls and buy when it rises” to hedge risk.
According to Bloomberg’s options distribution data, the current Max Pain level is near 6,900, while the index is struggling below it. By March 11th, Max Pain stands far higher at 6,900. The index is also trading about 1.2% below the pain point.
In a “negative gamma” environment, this deviation means market makers cannot provide liquidity support — instead, they become accelerants to the decline. They must continuously sell positions to hedge their exposure to put options.
The put/call ratio has reached 1.95. This mechanism acts like an amplifier, intensifying downside moves. That’s why once the key level breaks, the VIX can quickly surge toward 30. Unless the index reclaims 6,800, this self-reinforcing downside pressure will continue to hang over the market.
2. Goldman’s Warning: “The Only Way Up Is Down”
Goldman Sachs’ trading desk stated bluntly in a client note: “U.S. equities may need further correction before achieving a sustainable rally.”
Historical data (since 1928) shows that the first half of March is one of the weakest periods of the year, with an average gain of just 0.3%. A real turning point often doesn’t come until after March 15 (with the last two weeks averaging gains of 0.8%).
Is this sharp selloff a “golden dip” or the start of a longer descent?
Leave your comments to win tiger coins~
Comments
The 6800 Fortress: Despite the intraday drop to a low of 6710, the index recovered to stay above 6800.
The Bull Case: Major institutions like Goldman Sachs & UBS have projected year end targets of 6,800 & above.
The Rule of The Best 10 days: If you sell now, you lock in a permanent loss on a temporary decline.
Missing out the 10 best days can halve your long term returns. Recovery often happens after the steepest drops.
My strategy is to DCA on my core portfolio of index ETFs like $SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 ETF(SPYM)$ which tracks the S&P500 Index with an ultra low expense ratio of 0.02%.
As Warren Buffett says: The stock market is a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient.
@Tiger_comments @TigerStars
@HelenJanet
Is this sharp selloff a “golden dip” or the start of a longer descent?
Leave your comments to win tiger coins~
Despite this near-term turbulence, Goldman Sachs Research still forecasts double-digit gains for the S&P 500 by the end of 2026, supported by solid economic growth and AI-driven productivity.
This would serve to stretch the runway further away from the AI bubble burst, but the bubble is getting bigger [Grin]
The put/call ratio has reached 1.95. This mechanism acts like an amplifier, intensifying downside moves. That’s why once the key level breaks, the VIX can quickly surge toward 30. Unless the index reclaims 6,800, this self-reinforcing downside pressure will continue to hang over the market.