Volatility Tracker for the week of January 25, 2010
Implied volatility exploded in equities last week as markets were ravaged to the tune of…four per cent? [2]
The term structure of implied volatility and the ratio of implied to realized volatility all moved back towards even, indicating how accustomed we had become to substantially overpriced options and contangoed VIX futures. [6,7,8] Implied volatility is now unsustainably high -unsustainable, that is, unless you expect two-thirds of trading days to begin…
Volatility Tracker for the week of December 14, 2009
My sense of the markets at this juncture is that elevated implied correlations are truthful, even oracular, [10] with too-high index implied volatility representing not so much the jump risk with which the VIX is usually associated as the unwelcome prospect of individual equities tracking each other too closely. The most urgent scenario is of a strengthening dollar and unwinding “risk trade” in which good and bad companies are punished alike,…
Volatility Tracker for the week of November 23, 2009
News-making price changes in gold [11] have not been accompanied by any particularly noteworthy behavior in the options market. While it would be wrong to suggest that options in any way “anticipated” the gold rally, it is also fair to say that price action in the underlying has been roughly in line with the expectations given by option prices. Notice that the CBOE’s VIX-style gold volatility index (GVZ) has drifted between…
Volatility Tracker for the week of November 16, 2009
Equity index options are about as evenly priced as they’ve been in some time [5,6], but another continuation of the intermediate-term rally would mean more disappointment for option buyers, especially those who entered new positions in early November.
The ratio of short-and long-term (Jan 2010 vs. Jan 2011) implied correlation is getting noisier, but is also challenging its lows for the year. At the Volatility Trading Summit earlier this month, several…
Volatility Tracker for the week of November 1, 2009
Equity markets have been drunk on the wine of federal stimulus for most of this year. While the increased volatility in the latter half of last week could amount to a mere hiccup in the reflation rally, indicators suggest that more participants are concerned about an equity market “hangover” than at any time since the market bottom. The transition to a different market environment may have just occurred, and in the…
Monday, January 25, 2010
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