The price of VIX futures expiring in three months has exceeded t

Home News Top HeadlinesMost PopularExclusiveWorldwideRegionsMarketsIndustriesEconomyPoliticsLawEnvironmentScienceOpinionMuse: Arts, Culture & SpendSportsBloomberg Markets MagazineLeadersEntrepreneursMarket Data OverviewStocksStock FuturesCurrenciesCommoditiesRates & BondsETFsMutual FundsEconomic CalendarPersonal Finance News & VideosCalculatorsPortfoliosTV Live TVShowsSchedulesRadio Live RadioShowsScheduleMore VideoPodcastsMobile AppsBusinessweek.comBloomberg SportsInside Bloomberg.comFeedback AnywhereProfessionalSolutionsAboutLog inRelated News:India & Pakistan · U.S. · Funds · Municipal Bonds · Stocks · Insurance · France · Canada .Stock Bears Unprecedented as VIX Futures Recall Rally
By Alexis Xydias and Jeff Kearns - Sep 13, 2010 1:51 PM PT
Email Share
Business ExchangeTwitterDeliciousDiggFacebookLinkedInNewsvinePropellerYahoo! BuzzPrint Futures on the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index are pricing in a three-month gain of 31 percent and contracts based on swings in Europe and emerging-market equities have risen to near records, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Photographer: Tim Boyle/Bloomberg


Play VideoSept. 10 (Bloomberg) -- James Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management, talks with Julie Hyman about the outlook for the U.S. economy and markets, and his investment strategy. Paulsen also discusses the significance of the Obama administration's economic initiatives compared with market forces. (Source: Bloomberg)
Concern that stocks will plunge has never been higher in global options markets, and that may mean it’s time to buy.

Futures on the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index are pricing in a three-month gain of 33 percent and contracts based on swings in Europe and emerging-market equities have risen to near records, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Five of the seven times the VIX gap widened this much, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 11 percent on average in the next six months. One exception was May 2008, two months after Bear Stearns Cos. collapsed and before a 40 percent drop.

Investors are trying to decide if record pessimism is warranted amid signs $1 trillion of emergency spending in Europe is failing to cure the region’s debt crisis, while American companies aren’t hiring. Bulls say the best time to purchase stocks is when fear is rising and that forecasts for the biggest surge in corporate profits in two decades mean equities will prove to be a bargain even as the global economy slows.

“We had too much negativity, and it will take time for confidence to come back,” said Matthias Fankhauser, a Zurich- based fund manager at Clariden Leu, which oversees $100 billion. “Whatever you look at, equities are very attractive now. The market is overshooting, and if you get a slight change in sentiment, you could get a nice upside from here.”

Newmont Mining Corp. and Reynolds American Inc. are among companies whose premium for three-month options has risen to the highest level in a year, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Weekly Advance

The S&P 500 climbed 1.1 percent to a one-month high of 1,121.90 at 4 p.m. New York time after Chinese industrial production rose the most in three months. The stock benchmark gained 0.5 percent last week, pushed up after first-time claims for unemployment benefits declined. The CBOE gauge climbed 3.2 percent to 21.99, posting the first weekly advance since Aug. 13. Three-month futures on the VIX closed 8.09 points higher than the measure on Sept. 3, near a record set July 20.

December futures on Europe’s VStoxx Index are 5.5 points higher than the gauge, near the most since the derivatives were introduced by Deutsche Boerse AG’s Eurex in June 2009. Three- month options on the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index, an exchange-traded fund tracking stocks in 21 developing nations, cost 30 percent more than this month’s contracts last week, the most since November 2006.

VIX Futures

The price of VIX futures expiring in three months has exceeded the level of the index by 5 points or more seven times since 2004, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Five times, the S&P 500 rallied during the next six months, including the 27 percent surge that began in July 2009. The benchmark measure of U.S. stocks increased 6.6 percent starting in June 2004.

Expectations for higher volatility suggest too much pessimism, meaning stocks are worth buying, according to Pierre Lapointe, global macro strategist at Brockhouse & Cooper Inc. in Montreal. His firm oversees $500 million and advises more than 200 asset managers worldwide.

“Negativity in the market is very, very high,” Lapointe said. “We’re still bullish and think the recent soft patch is normal in an economic recovery pattern. We would not be buyers of volatility.”

The S&P 500 slumped as much as 7.1 percent to 1,047.22 after the Federal Reserve said Aug. 10 that the pace of economic recovery is likely to be “more modest” than previously forecast. September is the worst month for U.S. stocks, with the S&P 500 falling 1.2 percent on average since 1928. The second- biggest average monthly slump is February at 0.3 percent.

Portfolio Protection

Investors are snapping up Treasuries amid concern the U.S. is headed for the second recession in three years, driving yields on 10-year notes down to 2.4158 percent on Aug. 25. The payout was last that low in April 2009, during the aftermath of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

“If the bond market is right and you have a slowdown in the economy, then stock markets should also come down,” said Gilbert Keskin, Paris-based manager of Amundi’s Volatility funds, which have 5 billion euros ($6.4 billion) in assets. “That is why investors are protecting their portfolio by buying options or futures on the VIX.”

Birinyi Associates Inc. said in March that investors looking for clues about the U.S. stock market should probably ignore the VIX.

Summary of History

Speculation that equity returns will be positive after the volatility gauge decreases and negative when it climbs has little basis in fact, according to Laszlo Birinyi’s Westport, Connecticut-based firm. The VIX provides a summary of historical price swings and tends to move in lockstep with equities instead of forecasting their direction, Birinyi Associates said.

The recovery in the U.S. weakened in the second quarter more than the government previously estimated. The world’s largest economy grew at a 1.6 percent annual pace, down from a projection of 2.4 percent in July, the Commerce Department said Aug. 27. Economists estimated a 1.4 percent expansion, the median of 81 forecasts in a Bloomberg survey.

While companies in the U.S. added 67,000 jobs in August, beating the median economist estimate of 40,000, monthly private employment growth has slowed from a peak of 241,000 in April. In Europe, the sovereign-debt crisis that threatened to tip the region back into recession shows no signs of ending. The yield premiums investors demand to hold Greek, Spanish and Irish debt rather than German bunds are even wider than before the EU announced its rescue package for the region on May 10.

‘Thin Rope’

“It’s a thin rope we are walking, certainly in the developed world, so you can fall on one side or the other,” said Patrick Moonen, a senior strategist at ING Investment Management in The Hague. The firm oversees $462 billion. “Volatility will remain high just because of the high uncertainty on the macro outcome.”

Investors may still be shaken from the May 6 crash that erased $862 billion from U.S. equities in less than 20 minutes. The VIX, which measures the cost of options that protect against losses in the S&P 500, soared the most in 19 months that day to 32.80.

“Market participants are taking a once bitten, twice shy attitude,” said Bhavin Patel, London-based derivatives strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. “The experience of sharp recent moves, coupled with a fragile economic scenario, has helped put up this premium on volatility.”

Newmont, Reynolds

Newmont Mining’s three-month option prices rose this month to 1.1 times one-month contracts, the highest ratio since January 2007 for the Greenwood Village, Colorado-based company. The largest U.S. gold producer has rallied 28 percent since Dec. 31 as futures on the metal rose 14 percent this year and reached a record $1,266.50 an ounce on June 21.

The ratio for Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based Reynolds American options was 1.24 last week, just under last month’s 15- month high of 1.25. The second-largest U.S. tobacco company has gained 7.7 percent this year.

Bulls are counting on projections of 36 percent and 15 percent earnings growth for S&P 500 companies in 2010 and 2011, respectively, according to the average analyst forecasts in a Bloomberg survey. Sentiment on stocks is already turning around. Individuals’ confidence in U.S. equities has soared in the biggest two-week climb since March 2009, according to the American Association of Individual Investors.

“It’s a tug of war between the bleak economic data we are getting and the positive comments from companies,” said Cyril Castelli, a London-based strategist at Louis Capital Markets LP, which advises hedge funds. “Money is to be made betting against those projected high levels of volatility.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Alexis Xydias in London at axydias@bloomberg.net; Jeff Kearns in New York at jkearns3@bloomberg.net.
.
Email Share
Business ExchangeTwitterDeliciousDiggFacebookLinkedInNewsvinePropellerYahoo! BuzzPrint .Related News
India & Pakistan · U.S. · Funds · Municipal Bonds · Stocks · Insurance · France · Canada .Sponsored Links
Subscribe to Bloomberg Markets, Save 58% off the Newsstand Price.More Stories
Google Android Tablets May Surpass IPad With Wider Availability Updated 40 minutes ago .RIM Sales, Profit Beat Estimates on Smartphone Demand Updated 43 minutes ago .Japanese, Australian Stock Futures Climb on Currency, Higher Metals Prices Published 48 minutes ago .Democrats Losing Senate Would Produce Best S&P 500 Returns, Birinyi Says Updated 1 hour ago .More News »
Advertisement
Related Videos
Play VideoRaymond James's Saut Interview on U.S. StocksAdvertisementFree Futures Trading NewsletterFree Futures trading newsletter with original articles and code.www.breakoutfutures.com Play VideoU.S. Stock Market Wrap Play VideoU.S. Stocks Gain on Inventory Data, China Oil Imports Play VideoBell Direct's Lee Interview on Australia Stocks, Economy Play VideoChadha Interview on Stock Market and Elections Play VideoRCM's Konyn Interview on Chinese Stocks, Economy Play VideoWells Capital's Paulsen Interview About Economy, MarketsMarket Snapshot
U.S.
Europe
Asia
.Ticker Price Price Delta
Dow 10594.80 +22.10 (0.21%)
S&P 500 1124.66 -0.41 (-0.04%)
Nasdaq 2303.25 +1.93 (0.08%)

Ticker Price Price Delta
STOXX 50 2784.61 -9.75 (-0.35%)
FTSE 100 5540.14 -15.42 (-0.28%)
DAX 6249.65 -12.22 (-0.20%)

Ticker Price Price Delta
Nikkei 9509.50 -7.06 (-0.07%)
TOPIX 844.71 -3.93 (-0.46%)
Hang Seng 21691.40 -34.19 (-0.16%)
Stocks on the MoveMost Popular Stories
U.S. Economy: Jobless Claims Drop, Philadelphia Gauge Shrinks Updated 3 hours ago .Senate Approves Tax Cuts, Eased Credit for Small Businesses Updated 4 hours ago .Most Stocks Fall on FedEx Forecast, U.K. Sales; Gold Gains Updated 2 hours ago .Google Android Tablets May Surpass IPad With Wider Availability Updated 40 minutes ago .More Most Popular Stories »
Advertisements
Sponsored Links
Last update: 1:33 AM ET, Sep 14 .. BloombergRate this Page Go to the old version of Bloomberg.comNews
Exclusive
Worldwide
Regions
Markets
Industries
Economy
Politics
Law
Environment
Science
Opinion
Muse: Arts, Culture & Spend
Sports
Market Data
Stocks
Rates & Bonds
Currencies
Mutual Funds
ETFs
Commodities
Economic Calendar
Personal Finance
TV
Radio
Video
Podcasts
Personalities
Keene On Demand
Mobile
Leaders
Technology
More from Bloomberg
Bloomberg Businessweek
Business Exchange
Bloomberg on Twitter
Bloomberg on Facebook
Bloomberg Government
日本語サイト
Bloomberg Law
Bloomberg Markets Magazine
Bloomberg New Energy Finance
Bloomberg Open Symbology
Bloomberg Press
Bloomberg Sports
Bloomberg UTV
Company
About Bloomberg
Solutions
Careers
Contact Us
Press Room
Help
Sitemap
Trademarks
Feedback
.©2010 BLOOMBERG L.P. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of Service Privacy Policy Advertising Unless indicated otherwise, intraday market data is at least 15 minutes delayed..

所有跟帖: 

VXX and VXZ look out one month and 5 months, the VIX and VXV ind -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (2171 bytes) () 09/17/2010 postreply 08:29:37

allabouttrends.wordpress.com vxx (图) -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (197 bytes) () 09/17/2010 postreply 08:40:56

BILL LUBY:VIX of 32 means that approximately one-third of the ti -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (4963 bytes) () 09/17/2010 postreply 08:54:38

请您先登陆,再发跟帖!