It's official. The VIX just closed lower than the 2022 low, and way below the long-term average of 19.67 since its inception in 1990. It is still far from the historical low of 9.14 though. Before you treat the VIX like a stock and think that now is a good buying opportunity, note that the VIX is not tradable. You can only trade VIX futures. An example would be the May contract which is currently priced at 19.55. This represents a premium of 18.8% from spot VIX. This means that spot VIX would have to increase by 18.8% for the trade to just break even. If VIX stays at the current level, you will lose close to 16% when the futures contract expires. Those long volatility ETFs like VXX and UVXY also suffer from this decay because the issuer also uses futures to replicate the ETFs. Volatilit
The VIX keeps going lower. Are we entering a new low-vol regime? While no one can say for sure, we can look to history as a guide. Ideally, we should look at the historical implied volatility, but VIX only started in 1990. Hence, I used realized volatility of the S&P 500 as a proxy since it goes back to the Great Depression. I define high vol as anything above 20 and low vol as below 20. The Great Depression was indeed a scary period, spending most of the time in a high-volatility regime. But in modern times, we are in a low-volatility regime most of the time. However, we still get the occasional vol spikes that can rival the Great Depression. $Cboe Volatility Index(VIX)$ $
If you ask a day trader, he will tell you to close out all your positions by the end of the day. And this is not without good reasons. Because a day trader is focused only on the short term. For them to make money, they need to be able to monitor and respond quickly to the markets. Thus, holding overnight risk is, for the most part, a strict no for them. But is an overnight risk something that terrible? Well, not if you are looking at the long term. In fact, if you don’t hold positions overnight, you are missing out big time. Your Investments Grow The Most After Market Closed I know this might sound incredulous but the bulk of your returns actually come from moves that happen overnight. To be clear about what I meant, let’s first talk about daily returns. Daily returns are measured from th
I hope everyone is enjoying the long weekend. I spent some time doing a little study on the S&P 500. Ever since the S&P 500 breached a 20% drawdown, entering a technical recession, it rebounded >15% from the low only to make a lower low. I wanted to know if something similar happened in the past. I found that outside of the Great Depression, there were 12 instances of the S&P 500 breaching a 20% drop, followed by a rebound of >15% from the low. Only 3 resulted in a subsequent lower low, including the one we saw recently. The rest all marked the start of a new bull market. As for the 2 periods that are similar to today, one is the Tech Bubble and the other is the Great Financial Crisis. For both periods, the NBER declared an official recession soon after the lower low wa
We are starting to get some data that indicates the economy is weakening. The latest is the worse-than-expected unemployment claims. However, calling a recession remains tricky as even the National Bureau of Economic Research has a mixed record in the past. To be fair, their job is not to forecast but to report on the past. On that count, their record is perfect. The message is that the future is always more unpredictable than we think. $SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust(SPY)$ $iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF(TLT)$ $SPDR Gold Shares(GLD)$
There has been a bit of divergence in the performance of the three US indices lately. Hence I looked at the historical performance going back to 1992, which was as far back as DJIA goes on Yahoo! Finance. If history is any guide, below are some observations: 1) DJIA and Nasdaq moved in lock-step before quantitative easing started, except for the tech bubble period. 2) Nasdaq can potentially close the gap with the other two indices, although the recent inflation crisis failed to close the gap. This is taking reference from the bursting of the tech bubble. 3) Surprisingly, DJIA outperforms S&P 500. This could be due to a value bias in DJIA. It is well-documented that the value factor outperforms over the long run. $SPDR S&P 50