Shorting volatility: Rising risks mean itchier trigger 
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		 [September 23, 2017] 
		 By Saqib Iqbal Ahmed 
		 
		NEW YORK (Reuters) - A long stretch of low 
		volatility for U.S. stocks has made betting on continued calm a popular 
		and lucrative trade, but traders and strategists warn that risks to the 
		trade have mounted, while the potential for profits has shrunk. 
		 
		U.S. equity market volatility - the daily fluctuations in stock prices - 
		has hovered near record lows for much of this year. 
		 
		The CBOE Volatility Index <.VIX>, a gauge of the degree to which 
		investors expect share prices to fluctuate, has averaged 11.4 this year. 
		That is lower than for any comparable period over its nearly 
		three-decade history. 
		 
		Robust corporate earnings, encouraging economic growth and a view that 
		world central banks are available to rescue markets if trouble strikes, 
		have helped mute stock market gyrations and spell success for those 
		betting on calm. 
		 
		The VelocityShares Daily Inverse VIX Short-Term ETN <XIV.P>, which makes 
		money as long as the volatility drops or holds in place, is up about 100 
		percent this year. 
						
		
		  
						
		Some traders, however, have grown more wary of increased risks to the 
		trade. 
		 
		"I think a lot of folks have gotten lulled into a false sense of 
		security because the short trade has gone so well for so long," said 
		Matt Thompson co-head of Volatility Group at Typhon Capital LLC, in 
		Chicago. 
		 
		"We are still shorting volatility but we have an itchier trigger 
		finger." 
		 
		VOLATILITY-LINKED ETPs 
		 
		While there are many ways to short volatility - bet on lower stock 
		gyrations - investors' hunger for this trade is particularly apparent in 
		the growth in volatility-linked exchange traded products (ETPs). 
		 
		Assets under management for the top two short volatility products is at 
		$2.8 billion and their exposure to volatility is at an all-time high, 
		according to Barclays Capital. 
		 
		But the very popularity of the trade has cranked up the risk. 
		 
		These products hold first and second month volatility futures, buying 
		and selling these contracts daily to keep their volatility exposure in 
		line with the level of stock swings in the market. 
		 
		Managers of these leveraged and inverse products are required to buy 
		volatility futures as they go up and sell when they decline. 
		 
		Strategists fear that this rebalancing - which needs be even more 
		pronounced if a shock follows a period of unusually muted volatility, 
		such as now - may be akin to adding fuel to fire. 
		 
		"There could be a feedback effect and maybe selling begets more 
		selling," said Salil Aggarwal, equity derivatives strategist at Deutsche 
		Bank in New York. 
						
		
		  
						
		
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"Risk/reward considerations would imply cutting positions to more manageable 
levels," he said. 
 
RISK VS REWARD 
 
Meanwhile, investors are not reaping as much for taking on risk as they did in 
the past, said Anand Omprakash, director of equity and derivative strategy at 
BNP Paribas, in New York. 
 
What traders are being paid to take on the short volatility risk currently, is 
slightly below their average historical take since January 2013, and roughly 6 
percent lower than what they were paid monthly in mid-2016, Omprakash estimates. 
 
"You were being paid much better for much of 2016 than for much of 2017," he 
said. "I don't know if I would necessarily say the trade has run out of steam, 
but I don't think it offers the kind of risk adjusted return that it offered 
last year." 
 
And the stakes are high. Strategists warn that one or two big shocks could wipe 
away months of profits. 
 
The inverse volatility product XIV, while having doubled in price this year, 
logged an 11.4 percent decline in August as stock gyrations picked up briefly 
amid escalating worries about the ability of the administration of President 
Donald Trump to push through its economic agenda. 
 
"The risk/reward of the trade as a buy and hold proposition is not the same as 
it was before the U.S. election or in the middle of the oil crisis in 2015 and 
early 2016," said Stephen Aniston, president of investment adviser Black Peak 
Capital, in Connecticut. 
  
Positioning in these products, primarily driven by retail players, may be more 
skewed to the short side than the broader market where institutional investors 
hold sway. 
 
"I don't think the risk is necessarily as big on the institutional side as it is 
on the retail side," said Omprakash. 
 
To be sure, not everyone is rushing to bet on a spike in volatility, but experts 
do warn that investors should tread carefully when shorting volatility from 
here. 
 
(Additional reporting by Terence Gabriel; Editing by Bernadette Baum) 
				 
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