Why are US stocks sluggish? Some blame a looming $5 trillion options
expiration
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[December 13, 2023] By
Saqib Iqbal Ahmed
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Dealers squaring their books ahead of an options
expiration that is set to be the largest on record for S&P 500-linked
derivatives may be helping to tamp down swings in U.S. stocks, market
participants said.
Some $5 trillion in U.S. stock options are set to expire on Friday, 80%
in S&P 500-linked contracts - the largest such expiration in at least 20
years - according to Asym500 MRA Institutional, a unit of derivatives
strategy and execution firm Macro Risk Advisors.
While such events can exacerbate volatility, strategists say market
participants’ behavior ahead of the upcoming expiration has been muting
stock gyrations and may be one reason equities have traded in a tight
range over the last few weeks.
The S&P 500 is up 21% this year, following a nearly 13% rally from its
October lows. More recently, however, market moves have been subdued.
The benchmark index has not logged a greater than 1% move in either
direction for 19 straight sessions, the longest such streak since early
August. At the same time, the Cboe Volatility Index stands at 12.07, a
near 4-year low.
Another example of the market's sluggish trading can be found in the
10-day realized volatility for the S&P 500, which is how much the index
has swung over the last 10 sessions.
That measure stands at 6.8%, after touching a low of 4.5% in late
November. By comparison, it stood as high as 22.5% in March, when a
regional banking crisis rocked markets.
The positioning of options dealers who act as intermediaries between
buyers and sellers of derivatives has been one factor in keeping stock
swings in check.
Options trading volume is on pace for a record year with average daily
volume of 44 million contracts, according to data from clearing house
OCC.
That volume has been boosted in part by the popularity of
exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that sell options to generate income that
have doubled in size in 2023 and now control about $60 billion,
according to a Nomura analysis.
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Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York City, U.S., December 7, 2023. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File
Photo
Robust options selling activity by these ETFs has left dealers
loaded with options contracts going into the last expiration of the
year.
In market parlance, the dealers are net long "gamma," and must
continuously sell stock futures when equities rally and buy futures
when markets sell off to keep their position neutral.
With the huge amount of options set to expire, that buying and
selling has had a knock-on effect of keeping stocks in a tighter
trading range, market participants said.
The dealers' positioning "is more than likely to arrest any deeper
selloff between now and year-end," Nomura strategist Charlie
McElligott said in a note on Tuesday.
Market participants have pinned the muted stock moves on other
factors as well, including volatility targeting funds and commodity
trading advisers, as well as the VIX's historical tendency to stay
subdued once it hits the bottom of its trading range.
The lull in volatility could extend to Wednesday's Federal Reserve
meeting. While the central bank is expected to leave rates
unchanged, investors are keen for hints on whether policymakers are
pivoting towards cutting rates sooner, an expectation that has
fueled the rally in stocks this quarter.
Expiration is likely to loosen the options market's vice-like grip
on stocks, said Brent Kochuba, founder of options analytic service
SpotGamma.
Markets faced a similar situation two years ago, when a similarly
large options expiration reined in volatility for part of the fourth
quarter, only to give way to a 3% rally in the last two weeks of the
year following the December expiration, he said.
"All that positive gamma is really crunching the market," Kochuba
said. "The lid has been kept on volatility."
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili, Nick
Zieminski and Jamie Freed)
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