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Oil is pushing higher amid fears of fresh Middle East escalation, adding a new layer of downside risk to EUR/USD and reviving demand for protection. FX options markets have already reacted. One-month implied volatility slumped to 5.50 this week, retracing all of its conflict-driven gains to hit its lowest since the fighting began, before rebounding sharply to 5.95 as fresh demand kicked in. One-month risk reversals have extended their recovery to 0.45 EUR puts over calls, reflecting additional risk premium for downside strikes over upside.
Yet EUR/USD's actual downside during the conflict has remained surprisingly contained — and that is the key to this trade.
That dynamic favours the EUR put Reverse-Knock-Out, or RKO — a structure that has been a go-to hedge since the conflict began and remains well-suited to the current environment.
While a vanilla EUR put gives the holder the right to sell EUR/USD at a set strike, adding a trigger below converts it into an RKO. The option remains live unless spot touches the trigger before expiry, at which point it expires worthless.
That knock-out risk is what makes it cheap — and crucially, pricing models assign a higher knock-out probability precisely because the downside volatility skew runs in the same direction as the strike, compressing the premium further.
The result is a structure that offers meaningful downside protection at a fraction of vanilla cost — ideal for those who fear escalation but expect EUR/USD declines to remain limited in scope.
With volatility rebounding, risk reversals skewed for puts
and spot resilient, the RKO remains one of the most efficient
ways to hedge EUR/USD tail risk right now.
EUR=EBS

EUR/USD FXO implied volatility

EURUSD RISK REVERSALS

(Richard Pace is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed
are his own)