trader Michael J. Zerinskas when the markets continually go into


The Anatomy of Volatility Futures (VXX, VIX)
Michael J. Zerinskas - Chief Options Strategist at Benzinga, provided by


SFGate November 26, 2010 04:00 AM Copyright SFGate. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Friday, November 26, 2010
.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Print E-mail del.icio.us
Digg
Technorati
Reddit
LinkedIn
Facebook Slashdot
Fark
Newsvine
Google Bookmarks
Twitter


Share Comments (0) Georgia (default) Verdana Times New Roman Arial
Font | Size:


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

.0 .
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
More Benzinga Headlines
New Volatility ETNs On The Way
Silver ETF Looking To Go Positive (SLV)
Jefferies Reiterates Hold Rating on Tennant Company (TNC)
.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Get Quote

Symbol Lookup


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
More Business
EU proposes new rules for future bailouts 11.28.10
In air cargo capital, no fear over shipping rules 11.28.10
Full agenda as Congress tries to finish for year 11.28.10
Seeking cash, Chavez looks to sell Citgo 11.28.10
.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
With Euro-fears, mixed macroeconomics data, and Korean skirmishes grabbing headlines, it is easy to get overly bearish on the movement of stock prices-this is a "natural" protective instinct. Those of us that trade for a living, however, cannot easily back away from the markets; we need to continually evaluate the landscape, monitor investor sentiment, and (most importantly) watch and interpret price action.

For me, when the markets continually go into a tizzy over the same recurring news, I turn to the volatility markets to see: 1.) what large, institutional traders are specifically expecting and/or hedging against, and 2.) what the futures markets are saying.

Given that the CBOE Volatility index (CBOE: VIX) is used primarily as a hedging vehicle, single trades of large size should be noted, though not in a directional fashion. This means that, if a large block of VIX $40 calls are bought, it does not inherently mean the trade voices the opinion that the VIX will rise to 40; it more often than not indicates a worry, which the trader is hedging against.

While you can look at individual trades in isolation, market theory illustrates that a large pool of data will give you the best reading of expectations. This is what the futures markets are for. The VIX futures will tell the story of what a large pool of large traders are worried about, so to speak.

You may be asking yourself, "How does this work?" or "Where's the connection between the options (single player) market and the futures markets (large pool)?" This is where the market maker comes in.

When a large player wants to buy calls, someone has to sell them to him/her. A market maker fulfills this need; but, by selling calls whenever customers want to buy, a market maker would become sorely exposed to sharp upside moves in the VIX very quickly. Therefore they then go into the futures market to hedge their short calls by buying long futures, thus driving the price of that future higher.

Depending on what month the original options trade occurred in more often than not indicates what futures contract month is purchased. This is how we end up with a futures curve, with different pricing for different months.

It should be noted that while market makers are in fact directional buyers, they are synthetic so to speak in that they are not making outright directional trades, only playing futures for hedging purposes. Thereby, through a chain of buying, selling, hedging, and otherwise you end up with a floating level of expected volatility for different months.

While this is not the only way that futures prices are influenced, this gives a broad overview of how volatility trades are different than typical equity trades; most notable is the fact that options strike prices are frequently not the expected price of a volatility product at expiration.

This is also the reason (coupled with a few other reasons) why technical analysis usually fails with the VIX...that, however, is a story for another day...



Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2010/11/26/benzinga644994.DTL#ixzz16b5al2lK

所有跟帖: 

a market maker:go into the futures market to hedge their short c -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (349 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 09:05:18

trader David Morrison VIX's long-term average 20 -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (3732 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 10:12:08

vix future premium level (图) -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (1156 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 14:15:48

vix options premium level 11/15/2010 closing price (图) -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (748 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 14:18:56

VXX:The put-call ratio is .25, normally considered bullish,but i -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (1475 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 14:23:26

NYSE McClellan Summation Index,Transportation Average Index (IYT -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (2855 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 14:26:22

trader www.advicetrade.com/nightlyreport (图) -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (7745 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 14:34:40

trader Lawrence McMillan if actual 20-day historic volatility of -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (3737 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 10:21:25

The equity-only put-call ratios are both on buy signals again. A -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (231 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 10:22:29

20-day 历史波动率》13,s&p指数 跌到20天均线下,可能是非偶然事件,下跌趋势开始? May 4, 2010 :The -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (2929 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 10:38:56

20-day 历史波动率》13,s&p指数 跌到20天均线下,可能是非偶然事件,下跌趋势开始? -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (781 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 10:42:04

HL:IV/HV ratio of 1.36 and an extremely bullish put-call ratio o -marketreflections- 给 marketreflections 发送悄悄话 marketreflections 的博客首页 (6266 bytes) () 11/28/2010 postreply 13:41:03

请您先登陆,再发跟帖!