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Something strange is happening in the market right now

In the past few days, the S&P 500 (SPX) has risen to all-time highs. I mean, that’s strange given our current economic back drop. But that’s not what I’m talking about.

What’s strange about the current state of the market?

While the SPX is at all-time highs, the volatility indices have been rising as well. These indices include VIX, VVIX, and VXX.

If you don’t know what these are, that’s okay. VIX is an index that tracks the implied volatility of the SPX based off how the options for that index are priced. It is what the one month expected move in the market is, in a sense. VVIX is an index that tracks the implied volatility of VIX based off how the options on VIX are priced. VXX is an index that tracks the volatility based off the weighted balance of the first two VX futures contracts which trade.

For now, let’s focus on VIX. On August 25th, VIX closed at 22. As of today’s close on August 31st, it is 26.4. In percentage terms, VIX was up today 15%. (Many people don’t like quoting VIX changes in percentage terms — I don’t care).

In 3 of the past 4 days, we have seen VIX close higher than where it opened. This has happened all while the SPX has hit all-time highs in each of the past four days.

VVIX — also known as the volatility of volatility — has shown a similar trend to VIX, rising in 3 of the past 4 days. VXX — which is based off the front two months of futures contracts on VIX futures — has also steadily risen and shown similar trends.

Realized volatility is far below implied volatility options are pricing in

The volatility that is implied by SPX options is much higher than the realized volatility we’ve seen in the past 30 days. According to my calculations, realized volatility for the past month has been under 10%. Meanwhile, VIX has held strong above 22, and has continued to climb in recent days as noted above.

Why is this strange to me?

In general, you tend to see VIX fall as SPX rises. In general, there is an inverse relationship between these two items.

Today, VIX rose by 15% while SPX fell by roughly 0.3%. According to my data, this has only happened 5 times going back to 1993.

vixspx 8-31-20

Note: The above chart is in percentage terms.

I’m not the only one that has noticed

Mark Sebastian, from OptionPit.com and frequent guest on The Options Insider Radio noted the following:

sebastian 8-31-20

What he is saying here is that there is a huge difference between the volatility being priced the NASDAQ 100 Volatility Index — VXN — and the S&P 500 Volatility Index — VIX. This is interesting to me because the NASDAQ 100 is composed of non-financial companies and is weighted heavily towards those tech stocks. The very tech stocks which have been going parabolic in recent weeks (some may even say months).

In addition, Matt Thompson noted the following:

thompson 8-31-20

The 5-day average contango, which is merely the difference in the implied volatility priced in by the front month futures contract and the second month futures contract is at 16.9%, which was at the 99th percentile since 2004. Also he noted what I noted earlier, that the VIX is much higher than the realized volatility on SPX.

What does this all mean?

This could mean a number of things. Ultimately it means there is a lot of uncertainty in the market, and options are pricing in more volatility than the volatility that we’ve witnessed in the last month.

This could mean that big money is hedging their positions with put options on SPX or call options on VIX or buying VX futures, all of which could cause the premiums paid to rise.

In addition, the VX futures for October are pricing in extra volatility due to the upcoming election. The pricing of these October futures remains elevated when compared to the September and November VX futures prices.

vx term structure 8-31-20

Investors are nervous about what could come in the next month or two. And they have good reason to be.

There is still no agreement on extended economic stimulus that the American people desperately need. Republicans and Democrats have still not agreed to a deal. As of the last update I saw, Republicans proposed a $1.3 trillion stimulus, which was rejected by Democrats. The House, led by Democrats, passed a $3 trillion stimulus back in May. They said they would be willing to lower their demands to $2.2 trillion. No deal is in sight, and that could have investors spooked.

Fact is, we are in a bubble

The last time market closed at all-time highs with VIX this elevated was during the late 90s tech boom. That was a time period which also coincided with easy Federal Reserve monetary policy and high speculation in stocks.

We are seeing similar behavior in the tech stocks and work-from-home stocks today. Apple, Amazon, Google, Facebook, Tesla, Nvidia, Zoom, and AMD are all examples of stocks which are booming right now.

But the pain for the American people is far from over. Continuing claims continue to remain above 14 million. The unemployment rate is over 10%. The economy is attempting to recover slowly. But stocks? They’ve ripped to all-time highs at a much more rapid rate. And the disconnect between those two has investors nervous right now.

Dark pools are not buying this rally anymore either

In order to understand what’s happening, check out the Dark Pools. According to the Dark Pool Index over at Squeezemetrics.com, Dark Pools have printed under 45% for 17 days in a row. In general, a print over 45% is considered to be bullish, and there tends to be a slight lag between dark pool prints and stock market returns.

dpi

This is meaningful to me because Dark Pools bought the rally all through April well into July. But they aren’t buying anymore.

Perhaps we will begin to see a return of selling to the market in the coming days or weeks. I know I’m on high alert for that right now and will be ready to short this market when the opportunity presents itself.

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Did the Federal Reserve Kill the Volatility Trade?

On October 11, 2019, the Federal Reserve announced they would begin buying Treasury Bills in an effort to ensure there are “ample reserves” in the banking system through the end of the year.

fed treasury oct 11

On October 11, 2019, the Volatility Index (VIX) sat at 17.4. Today on November 26, 2019 the VIX has recently closed at 11.5. As you can see from below, it appears as though this not-QE program that is “organically” growing the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet has effectively killed the long VIX trade.

fed vix chart

The case made that supports this idea is that investors are engaging in more risk on behavior, because they are basing their decisions based on the Federal Reserve’s prior balance sheet expansion programs (QE 1-3).

Because the Fed is purchasing T-bills, they have eased some of the money market pressures. Liquidity in the market has proven to be a positive catalyst to the market.

Why do I believe this?

It can’t be the trade deal.

That’s the only other source that has been moving the markets higher according to many daily stock market new reporters. And I don’t believe these markets are pushing higher on hopes of a trade deal.

I think the Fed’s easy money policies have once again eased tensions. For now.

A lesson to me

This whole scenario has taught me a valuable lesson about position sizing. I’ve learned to not be so overconfident in my predictions.

Every trade made is a small bet. Each bet will abide by the Kelly criterion.

Never go all in.

Grow your money slowly and strategically.

Live to trade another day.

Read

Barton_options on Twitter has been a great resource for me to learn more about the Federal Reserve operations and how it relates to the Treasury and the overall economy.

He recently wrote about this in a newsletter you can read here.

This is what’s going to happen in the market this week

In this article, I’m going to review my past predictions and make some new ones.

On August 3rd, I wrote a post laying out what I thought would happen. Shall we take a look?

As I mentioned earlier, I expect IWM to pullback 5-7% since it broke the $153.50 support level earlier today.

IWM finished this week down 1.28%. I didn’t put a date on the 5-7% pullback, but this is something I expect to play out within the next two weeks.

This would give you a range of $144.95 all the way down to $141.90 coming into play.

At a minimum, I do believe that $145 will be retested. This is the level that IWM dropped to in May following the added tariff announcements. See IWM chart below:

iwm81019

SPY is a little trickier for me. It tends to whipsaw in price when volatility picks up, possibly due to algorithmic and HF trading. I think we see SPY revisit $285 range before the end of next week (Aug 9 expiry), but it’ll be a rocky ride.

SPY surprised me this week with the massive selloff that took place on Monday. I thought it would be a rockier ride to get down to $285, but we actually touched as low as $281.72 on Monday!

I was correct about the whipsaw though! Tuesday and Wednesday started off as days that looked like they were ripe for shorting, but the market ripped back almost 2% higher come Thursday, and 4% higher off Wednesday’s lows.

I believe that this upcoming week (August 12-19) will see SPY dropping as low as $279, retesting those levels reached around May 13 this year, in the midst of the May selloff that took place.

I’m also watching the $272 price level to get rested in the next two weeks. See SPY chart below:

I think VIX will also whipsaw next week, seeing a range with a low 14.7 and all the way up to 23.5. That’s just my guess.

This week, VIX saw a high of 24.8 and a low of 16.8. Not too bad of a prediction!

Next week I’m looking for a high of 26 on VIX and a low of 17. Keep in mind, when VIX is this high and with the current news, a much higher VIX is always possible.

I mentioned on my Twitter that I picked up some VXX call options and XLF put options to set up for whatever could happen next week.

These are a small part of my portfolio. I have positions both long and short in tickers or tickers derived from the ones mentioned above.

Reviewing VIX from August 9, 2019

SPY was down 0.69% to $291.60 on Friday, and VIX was up 6.27% to 18.

VIX bounced off the 17 support level that I outlined in this post here. Here’s what I said Thursday even, after market close:

VIX hit the support level around 17 that I had set out in my post yesterday as a level to watch for. I think this line will continue to act as support and VIX will bounce going into close tomorrow.

The VIX level of 17 was actually laid out by me on Thursday, which can be evidenced with my TradingView chart I posted that day.

(I’m not saying this to brag. I believe it’s important for me to document every prediction and recognize why I was right or wrong. It’s the only way I’m going to develop a better intuition about market behavior.)

As you can see above, VIX did bounce above the 17 support level I laid out after dipping just below it on Thursday. VIX bounced off the support level going into the closing minutes of Friday, setting up a situation where VIX could spike again this coming Monday.

SPY and VIX – August 7, 2019

CHART TIME

I’m watching the $2900 support level on SPY in the coming days. We saw a strong rebound off the lows set on Monday. A move above $2900 would be bullish.

I expect SPY to bounce off $2900 as it will become resistance on the next leg down. What do you think?

spy8719chart

VIX showed a lower high on the current trading day. This is usually indicative of a reversal in the price action. I’m watching the 17 support level for VIX. If we break below that level, the next support level isn’t until 14.

I’m not sure if I’m overly influenced by the news lately, but I think there is still the possibility of VIX popping higher, 50% or more from it’s current levels to it’s highs. This would bring VIX up almost to 30.

I believe that the markets are vulnerable right now, and you should be careful trading out there!

vix8719chart

What’s going on in the stock market today? August 7th 2019 Edition

In the futures market, the S&P 500 was up 50 basis points overnight just before 6 am this morning.

As of this writing this the S&P 500 futures have tanked precipitously. At 8:10 a.m. the S&P 500 futures are down 45 basis points, almost a full 100 basis point swing from just two hours ago.

https://www.tradingview.com/x/p8mSqCAI/

What are bonds doing today?

Bond prices continue to rise today. The 10-year T-note Futures are up 50 basis points this morning driving expected yields down as central banks across the globe continue to implement easy money policies.

What is the Yuan doing today?

Yesterday, it appeared that China was letting their foot off the gas. However, their currency is devalued again today. After dropping slightly yesterday, the USD/Yuan exchange rate is up 34 basis points.

https://www.tradingview.com/x/tXuE6O4l/

The concern is if China doesn’t have control over the currency. As I mentioned the other day, if China loses control over their currency it could be very bad for global markets.

What should you watch for today?

Based off the futures behavior in the past two hours, and the volatility index spiking up 9% off of its morning lows from just a few hours ago, this could be an interesting day in the market with more selling to come.

I’m not sure what’s going on in the market at the moment but it seems like investors are dumping risk assets.

Money seems to be piling into bonds at the moment.

Also money is piling into commodities. Gold is up 1.62% from the prior day. gold continues to Rally in the face of easy monetary policies engaged by the central banks across the globe.

What’s going on globally?

According to a report from Bloomberg, global easing is picking up pace as New Zealand shocked the market with a bigger rate cut than expected.

New Zealand’s Central Bank reduced its cash rate by 50 basis points. New Zealand Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr didn’t rule out negative interest rates to help prop up inflation.

This cut by New Zealand mirrors what’s been going on in  Europe, Japan, and what will be coming in the United States in the near future.

Interest rates are getting cut. They’re going to get caught big. They’re going to go negative. This is going to have a significant impact on  the bonds in commodity markets especially.

Keep an eye on GOLD and TLT today to see what the market is pricing in. Check out the article I wrote about on game theory and the markets, and why you should pay attention to not only equities, buy bonds and commodities as well.

 

The sell-off is not completed

Investors must now price in additional tariffs on China, and further conflict going forward with regards to China.

We won’t have a trade deal anytime soon. It’ll take a while for the repricing of assets to trickle through the market, just like it did back in May.

As I mentioned earlier, I expect IWM to pullback 5-7% since it broke the $153.50 support level earlier today.

SPY is a little trickier for me. It tends to whipsaw in price when volatility picks up, possibly due to algorithmic and HF trading. I think we see SPY revisit $285 range before the end of next week (Aug 9 expiry), but it’ll be a rocky ride.

I think VIX will also whipsaw next week, seeing a range with a low 14.7 and all the way up to 23.5. That’s just my guess.

However, a quick resolution on China trade would negate this scenario.

Reviewing the Past Week Predictions

On July 31, after market close, I predicted:

VIX will peak around 23-25.

SPY pulls back to $292 by the end of this week.

IWM pulls back to $151.

My VIX prediction was way off, with VIX finishing at 17.6 today.

My SPY and IWM predictions were pretty damn good though. SPY finished at $292.97 and IWM at $152.48.

More predictions will come…