Skip to main content

The VXST:VIX Ratio – Knowing when a VIX spike is out of steam

November 9, 2017 – Today was a terrific day for trading volatility. Plenty of money could be made on both sides of the trade, and unless you got greedy, everyone left happy. Today was also a textbook example of an indicator I like to use to identify VIX tops: the VXST:VIX ratio.

I mentioned it briefly in my last entry, but I'll expand on it a little today. Without going into mathematical definitions, VXST is VIX's jumpier, angrier baby brother. If you know the simple definition that VIX is the expected volatility over the upcoming 30 days, VXST is the equivalent for the upcoming 9 days. Think of it as volatility with an even shorter time horizon than VIX – kind of like zooming in on the next few days. It tends to rise faster than VIX, and drops faster than VIX.

The VXST:VIX ratio is just a simple way of telling us which value is greater, and by how much – VXST or VIX. The normal state of a healthy, up-trending market is that VXST is lower than VIX, similar to the way that the VIX futures curve usually slopes up. Traders expect volatility to be greater in a month than they do over the next few days. So the VXST:VIX ratio is typically less than 1.

When the VXST:VIX ratio starts rising (especially if it starts rising aggressively), and and VXST overtakes VIX, traders are starting to believe that short-term volatility is outpacing longer-term volatility. This coincides with a very jittery or strongly down-trending market, as was the case today when the S&P 500 was down about 1% at its worst levels of the day. A VXST value greater than VIX is generally a warning sign to traders with a short VIX position because VXST often continues pulling VIX higher, and there is real risk of a runaway VIX event. How this scenario is handled by VIX traders varies – some reduce or cover their positions, some go long, some hedge. But you can't simply ignore this indicator if you are short volatility.

Taking the analysis just one step further, it would make sense that if VXST stops outpacing VIX and begins to retreat relative to VIX, it might signal a top to the ongoing VIX spike. This is exactly what happened today, as seen on the 5 minute chart. The spot VIX peaked at 12.19 just as VXST:VIX hit a high of 1.0686 (lower chart, red arrow). Traders with a high risk tolerance may have been able to use the next bar as an initial sell signal on the VIX, when VXST dropped just a bit. Traders who were still long volatility into the move should definitely have heeded this warning and taken profits.


Of course, any single indicator can be used in hindsight to justify a move, and I would never recommend relying simply on this one indicator to trade an entire position. In fact, I was watching SPX futures while VIX was peaking and I had a slightly lower target for SPX futures, but it was coming up fast so the VIX spike was definitely on my radar. If I hadn't already been slightly short the VIX into this spike, I might have been more aggressive and added to my short position right there.

The confirmation came about half an hour later when VXST crossed back under VIX and the ratio dropped back under 1.0 (green arrow). At this point SVXY, which follows the inverse of VIX futures, was already 3% off its low, but it became “safer” to add to a short VIX position and follow the index back down. By the end of the day SVXY rallied and finished up another 2% after VXST:VIX dropped below 1. Any traders who were still long the VIX from the morning definitely should have sold by then as there was no longer any reason to stay long with VXST dropping so quickly relative to VIX. The move was, in essence, out of steam.

Of course, everything needs to be traded with context. VXST could have taken another leg up and VIX could have surged the rest of the afternoon. Other indicators need to be watched for clues that this is a possible scenario, such as market internals (breadth indicators, the A/D line, volume profiles and so on). Today was a textbook example of an intraday reversal. One day we will have a multi-day VIX move which will play out differently. When that happens, I'll be happy to post a comparison.

Happy VIX trading!

Comments

  1. For the comparison are you using the VIX-futures or the VIX?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. there you go:

      input V1="VXST";
      input V2="VIX";
      #input V3="/VXZ7";


      Plot Data2 = close(V1)/close(V2);

      Delete
  2. Welcome to Jammin' Jars Casino | Casino & Hotel in Joliet - KT
    Welcome to Jammin 제주 출장마사지 Jars Casino 성남 출장샵 | Casino & Hotel 부천 출장샵 in Joliet. We 충주 출장마사지 are excited to welcome 대전광역 출장마사지 you back to a world at play!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

2017: Trading for Dummies

2017 was the year that volatility died. No other year even comes close to the number of low VIX readings in the 8's and 9's. Records continued to be set in 2017 and each time VIX spiked just a little bit, baseline volatility settled to an even lower level afterward. Even the VIX high for the year was minor by historical standards. During a brief August pullback, VIX hit a high of 17.28. For perspective, there have been some years where the VIX would never have dropped below that level. The index has not been above 20 since the 2016 election.  2017 Weekly VIX Chart. Nothing to see here. Looking at the SPX, the low for the year happened on January 3, the first day of trading. The high happened less than 2 weeks ago on December 18. There's been a very steady march upward all year, broken only briefly by minor pullbacks. Those waiting for lower prices to get in were repeatedly left behind and bears were nowhere to be found. Even the brief August spike in volatility...

UVXY and SVXY Charts 24 Hours a Day

Did you know you can actually calculate and plot the values for SVXY and UVXY any time of day or night as long as VIX futures are trading? I went through a complicated explanation here so you can do it yourself and understand what goes into the calculations. Once you understand the calculation though, a simple shortcut is to use an index ticker known as SPVIXSTER. This is available on most trading platforms as well as Google and Yahoo quotes. An even nicer trick is that you can create a ThinkorSwim Thinkscript to plot the value you for you overnight! Basically SPVIXSTER is telling you the relative value of the 30-day weighted VIX future. The fund values of UVXY and SVXY are also available in realtime with the ticker UVXY.IV and SVXY.IV (or some variation thereof, depending on your specific broker). Now, although the fund values are not available after the 4:15 close, SPVIXSTER is reported around the clock as long as VIX futures are trading. See where I'm going with this? By ...