Is The Fear Subsiding? VIX Says Yes

A cynical look at our financial markets and the governments that support them

With the equity markets down over 2% intra-day as the participants realized Friday’s European Summit did not provide a silver bullet to the Eurozone problems, you might expect the VIX to skyrocket.  In reality, the S&P ended the day down 1.5% and the VIX ended down 2.65%.

We can look at the last few months of range bound trading to compare the absolute levels of the two indices:

It is difficult to dissect the sawtooth market action

At the end of October the VIX traded near the 25 level while the S&P was trading at about 1275.  At the beginning of December we saw the S&P trading at about 1260 while the VIX was at 25.  It is also important to note that the VIX climbed through last week even as the S&P traded in a tight range.  In the past wee, we have watched the S&P fall from1260 to 1230 while the VIX tumbled from 31 to 25.67…

This observation of decoupling can be better shown by looking at the correlation between the VIX and the S&P 500 over the last few months.  From the beginning of August through the mid portion of November we saw a very strong negative correlation between the S&P 500 and the VIX.  Since then, there has been a significant decoupling between the two on a rolling basis:

Decoupling of the VIX?

This could be viewed as the lifting of a worry cloud, but I more likely attribute it to the fact that we are heading into the end of 2011 and light holiday trading.  Most traders and banks are relaying an expectation of a holiday rally with a return of the crisis in the early part of 2012.

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Posted in Derivatives, Markets.

Tagged with Eurozone, implied volatility, S&P 500, vix.

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Have you been looking at the ratio b/t VIX/VXN (front vs. out month VOL costs?)…

Huge collapse in the ratio…out month fears, n-t complacency

http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=$VIX:$VXV&p=D&yr=4&mn=3&dy=0&id=p33530783449&a=239949597

Absolutely. I was saving that for another day. Where this is really apparent (to me) is in very long-dated implied volatility. 5 Year implied volatility on the S&P 500 is trading at 28.4%

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Plugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes DISCLAIMER - The content of this site is for informational and entertainment purposes only and is not to be viewed as trade recommendations or financial advice from the author. The author is not a registered investment adviser. There is no substitute for your own due diligence. Please be aware that investing is inherently a risky business and if you chose to follow any of the advice on this site, then you are accepting the risks associated with that investment. The Author may have also taken positions in the stocks that are being discussed and the author may change his position at any time without warning. Read Full Article »


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