The stock market's best trade of 2017 has become its worst enemy as the collapse continues - Two exchange-traded products that are designed to return the inverse of the Cboe Volatility Index surged almost 200% in 2017.
- They imploded in the final minutes of futures trading on Monday evening, losing 95% of their market value.
- Wall Street experts surmise that the spike in VIX futures forced covering of positions, putting downward pressure on S&P 500 futures.
- As such, US markets, including the S&P 500, opened lower Tuesday, although selling pressure abated in early trading.
Back in the old days, the easiest way to make money in the stock market was to bet against volatility.
You remember the old days, right? The halcyon days of 2017, roughly five weeks ago?
Back then, two exchange-traded products betting against US stock volatility owned the market, skyrocketing almost 200% for the year and dwarfing returns for the hottest tech stocks.
But the dream is now over for those who got rich using those instruments to short the Cboe Volatility Index. The so-called stock market fear gauge, which generally trades inversely to the S&P 500 and has spent most of the last year locked near record lows, spiked a record 84% on Monday.
The fallout was swift and brutal, as those two products — the VelocityShares Daily Inverse VIX Short-Term ETN (XIV) and the ProShares Short VIX Short-Term Futures ETF (SVXY) — essentially blew up. They lost 95% of their value in mere minutes heading into the futures market close on Monday, as their combined market value shrank to $150 million from $3 billion, according to Macro Risk Advisors.
It was an explosive situation that Wall Street experts had warned about for months. Perhaps the trade's notable critic was JPMorgan's global head of quantitative and derivatives strategy, Marko Kolanovic — a man so respected his commentary can move markets. He warned that the massive short positions on the VIX were at risk of unwinding in the event of a volatility spike because systemic strategies would be forced to cover positions, putting downward pressure on equities.
That appears to be what happened on Monday — a fact Kolanovic all but confirmed in an early-evening note to clients. And if strategists across Wall Street are to be believed, the worst may be yet to come.
Here's a roundup of Wall Street commentary to help you make sense of what's shaping up to be another rocky day in US markets. You'll note that the idea of systematic forced selling is a recurring theme: - JPMorgan — The "large increase of market volatility will clearly contribute to further outflows from systematic strategies in the days ahead (volatility targeting, risk parity, CTAs, short volatility). The total amount of these outflows may add to ~$100bn, as things stand."
- Barclays — "Although the precise timing is difficult to ascertain, we estimate that these funds will need to sell around $225 billion worth of equities over the next few days."
- Bank of America — "Quant funds (CTAs and risk parity funds running vol control) have likely contributed to the equity selling in one of the largest deleverings in our models' history, but their impact should dissipate quickly from here."
- Goldman Sachs — "We continue to believe that most volatility selling strategies employed by institutional investors are structured with the potential for large VIX spikes in mind. While the one-day move in the VIX increase was unprecedented, a rapid spike in the VIX was not unforeseen."
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