Options markets send cautiously bullish signal on U.S.
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[April 16, 2020] By
April Joyner
NEW YORK (Reuters) - As Wall Street stocks
pause for breath following a blistering three-week surge, signals from
the options market are suggesting that some investors believe the gains
may endure.
The Cboe Volatility Index <.VIX>, known as "Wall Street's fear gauge,"
ended below 40 on Tuesday for the first time since March 5, after rising
as high as 82.69 during a sell-off that took the S&P 500 down as much as
34% from its peak.
That 40 level is a significant one for some VIX watchers: The previous
bull market began in March 2009, when the VIX fell to similar levels
after having hit a closing high of 80.86 in November 2008.
Investors are digesting a rally in which the S&P 500 <.SPX> benchmark
index has soared 24% from its March lows in the midst of the spreading
coronavirus pandemic. While some market participants have taken heart
from unprecedented stimulus measures from the Federal Reserve and the
U.S. government, few can predict when the state-by-state lockdowns that
have virtually shut down the entire country will ease, what trajectory
the pandemic will take or the scope of its damage to the economy.
While plenty of uncertainty remains, the majority of options indicators
"are pointing in the right direction," said Randy Frederick, vice
president of trading and derivatives at the Schwab Center for Financial
Research.
Volatility crept higher on Wednesday. The VIX moved back above 40 as the
S&P 500 <.SPX> fell following data on steep drops in U.S. retail sales
and factory output.
Even so, other bullish signals formed over the last few days have not
been obscured.
Movement in ratios comparing the volume of put options, used for
downside protection, to that of call options, used to position for
market gains, has suggested easing demand for portfolio hedges. One such
measure, the ISEE Sentiment Index, jumped to its highest level since
late November on Monday, even as U.S. stocks fell.
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The Wall Street sign is pictured at the New York Stock exchange
(NYSE) in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S.,
March 9, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
VIX futures also reflect expectations that the coming weeks are unlikely to
feature the sort of turbulence that rocked markets in March. The inversion - or
backwardation - of the VIX futures term structure, in which prices for
front-month contracts are higher than those for later-dated contracts, has
become less steep over the past few weeks.
Yet there are few signs that markets will soon return to the kind of placid
trading that was a hallmark of the months leading up to the coronavirus
outbreak. The term structure has not reverted to its usual upward slope, where
later-dated contracts are more expensive than earlier-dated ones, indicating
that expectations of near-term volatility persist, analysts said.
At the same time, benign configurations in VIX futures have not always held up,
analysts warned.
In March 2008, for instance, the term structure flattened after the VIX
momentarily peaked amid the collapse of Bear Stearns, but it eventually inverted
again. Stocks made deeper lows in October of that year amid the fallout from the
global financial crisis.
"There's still uncertainty about whether front-month volatility spikes again,"
said Garrett DeSimone, head of quantitative research at OptionMetrics.
Other strategists have noted that as the term structure has flattened,
volatility expectations have stayed high for later months, in a possible signal
of concerns about lingering effects of the coronavirus outbreak.
The first-quarter earnings season could also ratchet up market turbulence,
especially when smaller, more volatile companies report results, said Matt
Amberson, principal at ORATS.
"We're not out of the woods from a volatility standpoint," he said.
(Reporting by April Joyner; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Leslie Adler)
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