Submitted by Tyler Durden on
08/17/2012 12:39 -0400
VIX is nothing more than the market's implied 'factor' that makes the
supply-demand of options prices fit with model-based parameters. In simple terms
it measures the market's expectations for volatility (up or down moves - not
just down) going forward. Empirically it has a relationship with realized
volatility - how much the market actually moved up or down relative to what VIX
expected - and professionals will use various 'scalping' techniques to lock in
day-to-day gains from the difference between the market's actual movement and
what options prices expected. To wit: the current expectations of
central bank action, just as it did in 11/2011 (global CB action) and 1/2012
(LTRO1), has caused a slow steady leak higher in stocks which crushes realized
volatility - currently at record lows. This in turn drags implied vol lower as
the 'scalpers' sell vol to capture the difference. With September
'events' around the corner, we suspect there are only a few more days before
realized vol picks up and implicitly implied vol momentum scalpers are squeezed
out again.
SPY (the S&P 500 ETF) Realized vol (orange) is following the same collapse path (red ovals) as it did in LTRO1 lead-up and the global CB action in November. Clearly the market is not willing to chase realized vol all the way down and maintains a premium (lower pane) which it appears to be up against here...
The lower pane above is the critical part to understanding market expectations for a risk pick up.
Clarifying: VIX 'expects' a certain move per day and as long as the move is smaller than 'expected' then a daily profit can be garnered... of course this works every day day in and day out until it doesn't and the market (and realized vol) rips your arms and legs off (as we show with read arrows below)...
The bottom-line is that a low VIX must be compared to its realized vol to judge real exuberance/complacency... but we note that there is a floor to the premium vol sellers are willing to accept to take on the rip-your-arms-and-legs-off probability. While implied vol provides insight into expectations of risk ahead, it is the premium to realized vol that tells you the real story and currently that premium remains very high - in other words, the market IS expecting considerably more volatility ahead (lower pane of first chart above).
Charts: Bloomberg
SPY (the S&P 500 ETF) Realized vol (orange) is following the same collapse path (red ovals) as it did in LTRO1 lead-up and the global CB action in November. Clearly the market is not willing to chase realized vol all the way down and maintains a premium (lower pane) which it appears to be up against here...
The lower pane above is the critical part to understanding market expectations for a risk pick up.
Clarifying: VIX 'expects' a certain move per day and as long as the move is smaller than 'expected' then a daily profit can be garnered... of course this works every day day in and day out until it doesn't and the market (and realized vol) rips your arms and legs off (as we show with read arrows below)...
The bottom-line is that a low VIX must be compared to its realized vol to judge real exuberance/complacency... but we note that there is a floor to the premium vol sellers are willing to accept to take on the rip-your-arms-and-legs-off probability. While implied vol provides insight into expectations of risk ahead, it is the premium to realized vol that tells you the real story and currently that premium remains very high - in other words, the market IS expecting considerably more volatility ahead (lower pane of first chart above).
Charts: Bloomberg
No comments:
Post a Comment