how do you trade the VIX
i notice that the Vix is listed to 2 decimal places yet in a demo account i was trialing, it was trading to 1 decimal place and without the real volatility that the vix chart displays elsewhere
Seems in every "how do you trade X instrument" thread on ASF there is someone happily suggesting the use of NYSE ETFs to track.
Once again, if you want to trade the instrument, trade the instrument. Trading these retail ETF will have your position murdered if your holding time is >1 day.
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I doubt even the IG VIX CFD tracks this poorly.
Great chart. Is your VIX chart the index itself or the front month future? VXX "meant" to track the short term VIX future so would that account for some of the divergence? What does the 1 month picture look like?
While exposure to the VIX has appeal, it’s important to note that exposure to the spot VIX still isn’t possible; as mentioned above, the value of this index is derived not from prices of component securities but from the prices of options on equity indexes. So the ETPs found in the Volatility ETFdb Category actually invest in VIX futures (on, in the case of ETNs, are linked to indexes comprised of VIX futures). This feature is necessary to make exposure possible, and it means that performance of these products depends on factors beyond the performance of the spot VIX–including the slope of the VIX futures curve.
The events of the last week–including steep equity market declines in the wake of the Japanese earthquake and ongoing tensions in the Middle East–presented an opportunity to analyze how the nuances of a futures-based strategy and other features of VIX ETPs translate into bottom line performance.
Last Wednesday was a dismal session for equities, with the S&P 500 SPDR (SPY) dropping close to 2% on the day as worries about a full-blown nuclear crisis in Japan intensified. Not surprisingly, as anxiety about global equity markets spiked so too did the VIX; the “fear index” was up more than 20% on the day. Many volatility products also saw big swings during that session; below, we take a look at how many of the exchange-traded volatility products performed as the VIX was skyrocketing.
One way of bifurcating VIX products involves segmenting by the duration of the underlying futures products into short-term and mid-term. Short term products, such as VIXY and VXX, generally offer exposure to a position in first and second month VIX futures. Mid term products, such as VIXM and VXZ, will offer exposure to fourth month contracts through seventh month contracts. There are pros and cons to each type of product. Short-term exposure will generally exhibit higher correlation to changes in the spot VIX. But because contango is often steepest at the short end of the maturity curve, the adverse impact of an upward-sloping curve may be more severe.
On the day the VIX jumped 21%, the ProShares VIX Short-Term Futures ETF (VIXY) surged about 9%–a huge gain but a jump considerably smaller than the movement in the spot VIX. Again, that disconnect reflects not a flaw in the exchange-traded product, but the difference in the risk/return profile of the VIX compared to an index comprised of VIX futures.
The mid-term counterpart to VIXY, the VIX Mid-Term Futures ETF (VIXM) climbed about 3% during Wednesday’s session. That move reflected expectations for the level of the VIX several months down the road. As such, VIXM tends to exhibit less volatility than VIXY or the spot VIX.
The chart shown is the index itself. Curious minds can take a look/run comparison at individual VIX futures by searching "VI*" on barchart.com.
The 1 month picture is irrelevant, people need to realise that ETFs/ETNs on futures/options/whatever are derivative of derivative of derivative products, and they will not track nor are they designed to provide the same exposure of the futures/options/whatever. Otherwise I would just accumulate huge unleveraged longs in VXX every time it made a 20 day low and wait for the inevitable spike off at any point in the future.
This article was written 7 days ago, worth reading if you aren't convinced that derivative of derivative ETFs are not the same as the actual instrument!
http://www.businessinsider.com/examining-vix-etf-performance-during-a-sell-off-2011-3
Snippet:
Great info.
If I interpreted this correctly it is saying that you can't track the VIX index perfectly because it simply isn't a tradable instrument.
You can however trade the VIX futures... which I assume is what you were suggesting.
The VXX ETF actually appear to track the VIX Apr contract reasonably well over the last 2 weeks.
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For short term stuff, the ETF/ETP/ETN range is relatively fine as I stated, although my guess is if you were holding VIX futs around the Japanese earthquake, you would be literally twice as happy as holders of VXX. This is the point! Why miss out on the actual % move of the underlying unless your capital is too small to trade the fut, in which case you probably shouldn't be attempting to buy/sell volatility in the first place (let's face it, if you are putting a thread on ASF asking how to trade the VIX, you probably shouldn't be attempting it either).
On the day the VIX jumped 21%, the ProShares VIX Short-Term Futures ETF (VIXY) surged about 9%–a huge gain but a jump considerably smaller than the movement in the spot VIX. Again, that disconnect reflects not a flaw in the exchange-traded product, but the difference in the risk/return profile of the VIX compared to an index comprised of VIX futures.
If you wanna put 10% of your portfolio into VXX because you think it will act as a rolling hedge, or you wanna "buy and hold" volatility, this is not the way to do it.
Because of the term structure inherent in the futures, you should trade vega via futures calendar spreads [long front month/short back month (short var) or vice versa (long var) or time flies] to negate the contango/backwardation, rather than the long/short the future itself.
skc, ok goodluck with that
Good luck with what? I am not the one trading VIX.
mazza, great suggestion, thought you might turn up before long
village idiot, isn't what you're describing the case with all futs which have upward sloping maturity curves? Settle at spot, or pay the future premium...not an issue with the product, each trader/investor must due their due diligence and decide whether or not to place the order.
skc, ok goodluck with that
While the value of the VIX, which is generally accepted as a broad measure of market volatility, is derived from prices of S&P 500 index options, it is not simply a weighted sum of underlying options (unlike other equity indexes like the S&P 500, where the index is a weighted sum of component prices). The options from which VIX is calculated sum up to the square of VIX, not VIX itself. This non-linear transformation means that you cannot just buy or sell a basket of options whose expiration price equals the index. Because of this non-linear component, there is no way to statically replicate the VIX.
Because the underlying VIX is not tradable, the futures on the VIX are not tied by the usual cost of carry relationship that connects other indexes and index futures. To price the futures that have no tradable underlying, we must follow a statistical approach based on various factors: the distribution of the VIX, the strength of the trend, mean-reversion and volatility. In a sense, VIX futures are much like options, having their own set of Greeks.
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