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Commentary

Reality Is Path-Dependent

This week’s letter begins with an overview of reflexivity. Many works exist on this topic, with “The Alchemy of Finance” summarizing it well. Written by investor George Soros, it concludes that markets are often wrong, and biases validate themselves by influencing prices and the fundamentals they should reflect.

Graphic: Retrieved from Michael Mauboussin. 

Namely, reflexivity is this feedback loop between participants’ understanding and the situations they’re participating in. Sometimes, these feedbacks manifest far-from-equilibrium prices. Think of the connection between lending and collateral value, selling stock to finance growth in the dot-com boom, leaning on cheap money to make longer-duration bets on promising ideas, or the success of volatility trades increasing the crowd in volatility investments, be this dispersion or options selling ETFs.

Graphic: Retrieved from Nomura Holdings Inc (NYSE: NMR)

Perception begets reality, with these far-from-equilibrium conditions reinforced until expectations are so far-fetched they become unsustainable. Sometimes, the corrections become something more, with self-reinforcing trends initiating the opposite way.

Enron creatively hid debt from its balance sheets, guaranteeing it with its stock. When the stock fell, it revealed financial misdeeds, contributing to a broader market downtrend, bankruptcies, and corporate scandals. 

FTX brought itself and some peers down when withdrawals revealed a billions-large gap between liabilities and assets. 

Volmageddon climaxed with the demise of products like the VelocityShares Daily Inverse VIX Short Term Exchange-Traded Note (ETN: XIV) after a sharp jump in volatility sparked a doom loop; to remain neutral, issuers rebalanced, buying large amounts of VIX futures, which propelled volatility even higher and sent products like XIV even lower.

Graphic: VelocityShares Daily Inverse VIX Short Term Note (ETN: XIV) retrieved from investing.com.

The expansion of such trades increases liquidity, sometimes making assets appear more liquid and money-like stores of wealth. This may also stimulate economic growth. Likewise, the contraction or closing of these trades can lead to a sudden reduction in liquidity, negatively impacting the economy and market stability.

“The Alchemy of Finance” identifies a recurring asymmetric market pattern of slow rises and abrupt falls. Additionally, if market prices accurately reflected fundamentals, there would be no opportunity to make additional money; just invest in index funds.

Further, we continue to see interventions to stabilize markets, and they encourage further distortion and misdirection of capital. Often, such interventions are blamed for benefitting wealthy investors most and increasing inequality. As explained in works like “The Rise of Carry: The Dangerous Consequences of Volatility Suppression and the New Financial Order of Decaying Growth and Recurring Crisis,” monetary authorities and regulators’ interventions reinforce scenarios of deteriorating economic growth, more frequent crises and less equality and social cohesion.

We’re getting off track, but the point is that the conclusions and approaches outlined in “The Alchemy of Finance” are captivating. Soros sought to understand markets from within without formal training, access to unique information, or his being math savvy; instead, he attempted to connect deeply with markets, assuming they felt like he did and he could sense their mood changes.

“We must recognize that thinking forms part of reality instead of being separate from it,” he explains. “I assumed that the market felt the same way as I did, and by keeping myself detached from other personal feelings, I could sense changes in its mood, … mak[ing] a conscious effort to find investment theses that were at odds with the prevailing opinion.”

We apply this understanding of the market’s mood in our best way here. Our long-winded analyses of everything from technicals to positioning and, increasingly, fundamentals and macroeconomic themes give us a holistic understanding of what’s at stake, whether self-reinforcing trends exist, and whether to adjust how we express ourselves.

Let’s get into it.


The Great Rotation

Last Thursday, an update on consumer prices showed US inflation cooling to its slowest pace since 2021. Accordingly, traders began pricing the news and buying bonds in anticipation the Federal Reserve may cut its benchmark rate by ~0.75% this year.

Graphic: Retrieved from CME Group Inc’s (NASDAQ: CME) FedWatch Tool. SOFR is a check on market conditions and expectations regarding short-term interest rates.

Optimism about lower interest rates prompted investors to shift from the previously favored large-cap tech, AI, and Mag-7 stocks into riskier market areas and safe-haven assets like gold, reflecting concerns about a potential dovish mistake. The Russell 2000 (INDEX: RUT), an index of smaller companies, outperformed the Nasdaq 100 (INDEX: NDX) by one of the most significant margins in the last decade. Despite the S&P 500 (INDEX: SPX) declining by nearly 1%, almost 400 components recorded gains.

Graphic: Retrieved from BNP Paribas (OTC: BNPQY) Markets 360.

With these underlying divergences, committing capital to bearish positions is challenging. Breadth strengthened with more volume flowing into rising stocks than falling ones. This wouldn’t happen in a sell-everything scenario, explaining the hesitation to sell.

Graphic: Market internals as taught by Peter Reznicek.

The outsized movement observed isn’t surprising as it aligns with the narrative we shared earlier this year. 

While individual stocks are experiencing significant volatility, indexes like the S&P 500, which represent these stocks, show more restrained movement. For example, after Thursday’s sell-off, despite its large constituents like Nvidia Corporation (NASDAQ: NVDA) weakening, the S&P 500 firmed.

Here’s a chart to illustrate.

Graphic: Retrieved from TradingView. Nvidia versus the S&P 500, with the latter in orange.

Among the culprits, investors have concentrated on selling options or volatility (the all-encompassing term) on indexes, and some of this is used to fund volatility in components, a trade (considered an investment by some) known as dispersion. 

The trade is doing well in this environment, with Cboe’s S&P 500 Dispersion Index (INDEX: DSPX) jumping to a one-year high. Dropping realized volatility (i.e., volatility calculated using historical price data) and a widening spread between stock and index implied volatility (i.e., expectations of future volatility derived from options prices) validate this trade’s success, reports Mandy Xu, the Vice President and Head of Derivatives Market Intelligence at Cboe Global Markets (BATS: CBOE).

Graphic: Retrieved from Cboe Global Markets’ (BATS: CBOE) Mandy Xu.

“The market has been broken up into two groups: 1. Nvidia and Magnificent 7; and 2. The other 493. The correlation between those two groups has been low, which has pressured S&P 500 correlation,” explained Chris Murphy, a derivatives strategy co-head at Susquehanna. “When looking at S&P stocks on an equal-weighted basis, the outsized impact of the MAG7 as a group and NVDA specifically is neutralized.”

Understanding correlation is critical to grasping the pricing dynamics between index options and their components and trading volatility dispersion. When counterparties (our all-encompassing term for the dealers, banks, or market makers who may be on the other side) fill their customers’ options sales in the index, they may hedge by buying the index as its price falls and selling when it rises, with all other conditions remaining the same. Consequently, trading ranges may narrow, with realized volatility also falling.

To explain visually, see immediately below. Movement benefits the counterparty’s position. Hedging may result in trading against the market, selling strength, and buying weakness.

Graphic: Retrieved from Reddit, from all places!

This effect may be less pronounced or absent in single stocks, which do not experience the same level of this supposed volatility selling; instead, there is more buying, and the opposite occurs. Movement is a detriment to the counterparty’s position, with all else equal. Hedging may result in trading with the market, buying strength, and selling weakness. This can reinforce momentum and give trends a lease on their life; hedging can help sustain and extend market movements rather than neutralize them.

Graphic: Retrieved from Reddit. 

Together, as counterparties align the index with its underlying basket through arbitrage constraints, its volatility is suppressed, and the components can continue to exhibit their unique volatility—the only possible outcome is a decline in correlation. If the index is pinned and one of the larger constituents moves considerably, the dispersion trader may make good money in such a scenario.

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg.

We now see large stocks starting to turn and lesser-weighted constituents in the S&P 500 firming up, picking up the slack. For instance, Nvidia traded markedly higher immediately after its last earnings report, and the S&P 500 was unfazed. Something is giving, and those constraints we talked about keep things intact.

The rotation, in and of itself, is healthy, giving legs to and broadening the equity market rally. It’s just that it’s happening with the most-loved stocks being severely overbought.

Graphic: Retrieved from BNP Paribas.

Should interruptions continue across large-cap equities, souring speculation on further upside, a broader turn and outflows may manifest. The market’s gradual shift into a higher implied volatility environment, notwithstanding direction, may aid in any such unsettling, feeding into a higher realized volatility.

Graphic: Retrieved from The Market Ear. 

Building on this point, we observe a shift in S&P 500 call options before last Thursday’s steep decline. Implied volatility rose with the S&P 500. SpotGamma indicates this is partly the result of demand for SPX call options as traders seek synthetic exposure to the upside in the place of stock. This “SPX up, SPX vol up” pattern is unusual and typically happens near the short-term tops.

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg via Danny Kirsch, head of options at Piper Sandler Companies (NYSE: PIPR).

SpotGamma adds that the pressure on individual stocks that followed last Thursday stemmed from significant selling of longer-dated calls in the tech sector, a last-in, first-out (LIFO) phenomenon. In other words, those late to the party are the first out!

The counterparts on the other side of this trading potentially (re)hedge this by selling stock.

Graphic: Retrieved from SpotGamma.

However, with call selling, the chances of sustained follow-through are significantly lower. Put buying, which was less prevalent, changes this dynamic. 

In the case of a prolonged downturn, equity put buying is the key indicator we would watch for, along with deteriorating market internals such as breadth, as analyzed earlier. We want to see traders committing more money to the downside at lower prices, and increasingly so, as prices drop and the range expands downward. That’s what market and volume profiles can help with!

The fundamentals don’t necessarily support the case for some disastrous downside, though. 

A dovish Fed can be good for risk as it’s seen as preemptive, BNP Paribas (OTC: BNPQY) shares. Or, a dovish Fed could suggest a coming deceleration. In any case, long-term interest rates will be least sensitive to any change, a negative implication for capital formation, growth, and equity returns.

The Summer Of George

Kai Volatility founder Cem Karsan uses this Summer of George Seinfeld reference to describe the current market. During the summer months, there is insufficient liquidity to overwhelm the market’s current position.

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg via Michael J. Kramer. 

We know the SPX volatility risk premium is near its highs this year. The Cboe, itself, shows the implied-realized volatility spread widening to 4.5% (96th percentile high). 

Implied volatility is low, but not cheap. Consequently, short-leaning volatility trades mentioned in this document remain attractive. 

At the same time, however, there’s still a ton of volatility protecting investors against downsides owned below the market. 

To quote QVR Advisors, there’s “too much supply of front month call selling and too much buying demand for longer-dated puts.” 

“This trade flow is contributing to a large and growing structural dislocation which is not compensating ‘insurance sellers’ (i.e., near-dated call and put writers) and is overcharging in implied volatility terms, buyers of insurance (i.e., long-dated puts).”

Taken together, the implications are staggering. With calm and falling realized volatility, there may be some counterparty re-hedging. This may consist of buying stocks and futures and supporting markets where they are. 

Let’s break down some of the trades to understand better.

Consider yourself a customer who owns 100 shares of the SPRD S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE: SPY). You’re traveling to Europe and want to hedge your position against the downside. So, you wake up one morning, go online, and tell your broker you want to buy one at-the-money 50 delta SPY put option.

The delta is terminology for how that option’s price will change based on a $1 change in the underlying. In this case, for every $1 move up/down, the option will change in value by $0.50. Delta is also used to estimate the likelihood of an option expiring in the money. For example, a delta of 0.5 suggests there is approximately a 50% chance the option will expire in the money. There’s also gamma, the second derivative of how the option’s price changes with underlying changes, but we won’t discuss that further.

With your 100 shares hedged, if the market goes down, you don’t mind. You’re hedged, after all!

Naively, we’ll say this trade wasn’t paired up against another investor’s; instead, some mysterious counterparty will warehouse this risk. These mysterious persons want nothing to do with the directional risk of your trade. They’ll hedge by selling 50 SPY shares (i.e., 100 × 0.50). Again, we’re naive here and don’t consider their potential to offset this risk with other positions they may have.

You check your phone after a while and find that SPY hasn’t moved much. Your 50 delta put is now 20 delta. Bummer! You shrug, turn off your phone, and hit the beach.

What happened to that mysterious counterparty on the other side of this trade, though? They bought back 30 SPY shares, supporting the market and reinforcing the trend! 

Though this is a naive take, it may help.

Reality Is Path-Dependent

Your and the counterparty’s actions partly shaped the SPY’s price movement. You bought puts, setting off a chain of events. The counterparty hedged, the market didn’t move, and the hedge was unwound. This only serves to support the SPY further.

“There’s skew in the market, which ultimately forces a buyback of stock by dealers, market makers, banks, etc., every day, and it accelerates into expirations,” Karsan elaborates

“When the market’s up, there’s a buyback and a momentum re-leveraging, … forcing more buying.”

As we approach the end of summer, things change. Among other things, elections are coming, and there will be some hedging of that. With months to go, broad market hedges against a sudden downturn have appeared generally inexpensive, with three-month puts protecting against a drop in the S&P 500 near their lows. See the dark blue line in the graphic below as an example!

Graphic: Retrieved from Cboe Global Markets. 

“The high dispersion of stocks has contributed to weighing on VIX,” shares Tanvir Sandhu, chief global derivatives strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence. “If the equity market breath improves then that may weigh on volatility, while a pullback in mega-cap tech stocks could see both correlation and index volatility rise.”

In fact, excluding NVDA, the VIX hit traded into the 9s, on par with 2017 lows. 

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg via Michael Green.

SpotGamma adds that we are in the second longest stretch without an SPX 1-day 2% move up/down; traders aren’t committing capital to bets on big moves, either. 

Graphic: Retrieved from SpotGamma. 

We see this in spot-vol beta, which refers to the relationship between the market (which we refer to as the “spot” here) and changes in its volatility over time or volatility’s sensitivity to market trading. 

This spot-vol beta has been depressed.

In observance, Nomura Cross-Asset Macro Strategist Charlie McEligott states there’s limited potential for volatility to decrease further, particularly with the SPX 1-month implied correlation at historically low levels. 

To that point, “the historically low spot-vol beta we are seeing now will eventually be followed by historically high spot-vol beta,” the Ambrus Group’s co-CIO anticipates.

Graphic: Retrieved from Nomura. A weak spot-vol beta historically leaves stocks going nowhere.

The case is less so valid with more actively traded shorter-dated options. According to Simplify Asset Management’s Michael Green, the sensitivity remains. You just have to look elsewhere.

Graphic: Retrieved from Michael Green.

It makes sense why. 

Shorter-dated options are less exposed to changes in implied volatility; instead, they expose one more directly to movement or realized volatility. They can be more attractive to hedge with but can cause problems and amplify wild swings in rare cases.

Graphic: Retrieved from JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE: JPM).

If news shocks the market one way, movements may exaggerate when traders scramble to adjust their risk, as discussed below. 

Though that’s usually not a worry, as Cboe puts, according to Karsan, a dwindling supply of margin puts, especially those with high convexity and far out-of-the-money, would be the indicator to watch for impending exaggerated movement. These options, particularly if shorter-dated, are crucial during market stress, serving as indicators and drivers of potential crashes when traded in large sizes (e.g., 5,000-10,000 0-DTE options bought on the offer to hedge). 

As a counterparty, you may also use similarly dated options to hedge yourself, bolstering a reflexive loop!

Again, the reality is path-dependent! The path leading to this point—low correlations and reduced availability of those protective options—sets the stage for increased volatility.

Here, we wish to emphasize the convexity component—gamma or the rate at which the delta changes with the underlying asset’s price—rather than the likelihood of the underlying asset reaching the options’ strike prices. Just because an option turns expensive doesn’t mean it is likely to pay at expiry; instead, it may have value because that’s precisely what traders need to trim their margin requirements during volatile markets. 

“Implied vol is about liquidity. It isn’t about fear or greed,” writes Capital Flows Research. 

“Implied vol is about liquidity on specific parts of the distribution of returns on an asset. Remember, even the outright price of an asset is pricing a distribution of outcomes, not a single destination. Options make this even more explicit by having various strikes and expirations with differing premiums and discounts.”

History shows a minor catalyst can lead to a big unwind. Take what happened with index options a day before XIV crash day.

“Going into the close the last hour, we saw nickel, ten, and five-cent options trade up to about $0.50 and $0.70,” Karsan elaborates. “They really started to pop in the last hour.”

“And then, the next day, we opened up, and they were worth $10.00. You often don’t see them go from a nickel to $0.50. If you do, don’t sell them. Buy them, which is the next trade.”

New rules surrounding the collateral traders must post to trade can only amplify a bad situation, “potentially leading to premature and forced hedging as volatility increases,” The Ambrus Group writes.

“Because everyone has to put down more capital, you have to disallow people from trading down there in a way that you don’t have to now,” JJ Kinahan, president of Tastytrade, says.

The opposite can happen when markets move quickly higher. Take the options activity and price action in the Russell 2000 over the last week. Volatility skew, or the difference in implied volatility across different strike options, steepened accordingly. 

Graphic: Retrieved from Bespoke Investment Group via Bloomberg.

Typically, options with farther-away strike prices have higher implied volatility than options with closer strike prices. When the skew steepens, the disparity in implied volatility between these various strike prices widens. 

Depending on the steepening, we may have insight into the type of impending velocity and trade accordingly.

For instance, the implied volatility of out-of-the-money (OTM) calls, which offer protection against market upturns, rises significantly compared to at-the-money (ATM) calls and downside protection (puts). This steepening volatility skew indicates heightened enthusiasm among investors regarding potentially large upward market movements. 

The steepening call volatility skew below results from distant call options pricing higher implied volatility than usual due to investor demand. Beyond helping understand the market’s thinking and mood, it can serve as a catalyst, with call options buying into a price rise further accelerating movement indirectly by how the other side hedges this risk (i.e., they buy stock to hedge).

Graphic: Retrieved from SpotGamma. 

This action is apparent elsewhere, too, in the S&P 500 (as can be seen via the SPX cross-sectional skew graphic from Cboe above), where it’s proving quite sensitive, as well as single stocks like NVDA and Super Micro Computer Inc (NASDAQ: SMCI). We provided examples this year where steepening call skew helped reduce the cost of trades we used to capture the upside. In one case, we removed SMCI butterfly and ratio spreads for tens of thousands of percent in profit (e.g., $0.00 → $10.00)!

Graphic: SMCI volatility skew in February, relative to where it was (shaded) in recent history before that.

Market Tremors

This week’s market tremors are affecting some of the most loved areas of the market, and a flattening skew (e.g., green line versus grey line below) alludes to further potential for pressure.

Graphic: Retrieved from SpotGamma.

In the long term, a few things stick out, including high interest rates and a stronger dollar, which create macroeconomic problems. 

A few explain it better than we do. Higher US interest rates relative to other economies can result in outflows and stress. Just look to places like Japan, where there’s been a lot of currency volatility. If the dollar’s strength continues, it could lead to crises elsewhere, creating a ripple effect and priming potential volatility at home.

“A US Dollar devaluation will then be a tailwind to S&P 500 earnings, which would be positive for stock prices,” Fallacy Alarm summarizes. “However, an unwinding carry trade also causes deleveraging, which is typically not good for asset prices.”

May this upset popular trading activities and catapult something minor into something more? 

Sure, and the current low correlation and implied volatility mean that any considerable market disruption could have a substantial impact. Still, markets are intact and likely to stay so.

“If we continue to grind higher, options will get cheaper and cheaper on their own accord. Not to mention all the vol selling that’s getting them to a point which is even cheaper, at some point,” Karsan adds. “And the acceleration generally in those things becomes on the upside, the realized volatility on the upside gets to be just too big relative to the implied, which means it becomes profitable for entities to come in and start buying vol at these lower levels. Add to that, the vol supply is likely to dissipate a bit as we get into September, October, and November. Why? We have an election sitting there.”

So, as the market moves higher, it transitions into this lower implied volatility, reflected in broad measures like the VIX. If the VIX remains steady or higher, “that indicates that fixed-strike volatility is increasing, and if this persists, … it can unsettle volatility and create a situation where dealers themselves … begin to reduce their volatility exposure,” naturally buoying markets as previously outlined. If there is greater demand for calls, counterparties may hedge through purchases of the underlying asset, a positive.

If The Music’s Playing, Get Up And Dance

With volatility at its lower bound, at which it can stay given its bimodality, it makes sense to look at markets through a more optimistic lens. A lot is working in its favor, and if near-term declines are marginal and not upsetting to the status quo, it may set the stage for a rally through elections.

Accordingly, how do we make positive returns in rising markets and minimize losses or gains in flat-to-down markets as we have now? That’s the goal, right?

For the anxious and must-trade types, short-dated (e.g., 50- or 100-point-wide and 0-1 DTE) butterflies in the NDX worked well on sideways days. Here, we’ve tried to double and triple our initial risk but can easily hit more in benign markets. For the passive types, calendars may do just as well should the realized volatility keep where it is or fall relative to what is implied. 

In anticipation of this week’s controlled retracement, we initiated wide (e.g., up to 2,000-point-wide) broken-wing butterflies and ratio spreads on the put side in the NDX, reducing their cost basis, if any, with the credits from the short-dated fly trades, among others. Into weakness, those spreads now price a few thousand percent higher, and we’re monetizing them, intending to use the credit to finance trades that capture upside potentially or to reduce our stock cost basis.

Regarding hedging potential outliers, BNP Paribas says VIX calls and call spreads remain compelling low premium tail hedges.

“And I think this is one of the arguments for going with VIX calls, not that we’ve seen anything explosive yet this year, but if we do see some of these things unwind, you’re going to get a kicker there where you might see the VIX cruise very quickly up to 45, and it probably won’t stay there unless there’s a real good fundamental reason for that to happen,” explains Michael Purves, the CEO and founder of Tallbacken Capital Advisors. Josh Silva, managing partner and CIO at Passaic Partners, adds, that “when there is a liquidation, it’ll be hard, it’ll be fast and it’ll be dramatic.” 

“Typically, the market after that is pretty awesome.”


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Categories
Commentary

Turning Nickels Into Dollars: A Winning Strategy For Market Crashes

Good Morning! I hope you had a great weekend and enjoy today’s letter. I would be so honored if you could comment and/or share this post. Cheers!

Risk appetite in the last months was fueled by the emergence of a “goldilocks disinflation thesis,” describes Marko Kolanovic of JPMorgan Chase & Co. This thesis envisions a no-recession scenario where central banks cut rates early, especially in the lead-up to elections.

The market is banking on such anticipatory movement by the Federal Reserve, pricing five rate cuts and the target interest rate moving from 525-550 to 400-425 basis points by year-end. With the backdrop of easing liquidity conditions through 2025 and continuing economic growth, equity investors are positioning for a broader rally. This has led to churn and a loss of momentum.

Graphic: Retrieved from Carson Investment Research via Ryan Detrick.

Though historical trends encourage optimism, Kolanovic is concerned markets are overlooking geopolitical events, such as the Houthi shipping attacksexercises near the Suwałki Gap, and Russia’s testing of electronic warfare. Despite these potential disruptors, atypically low volatility skew and implied correlation indicate a lack of market responsiveness and positioning for less movement.

Recall skew reflects a scenario where increased market volatility disproportionately impacts farther away strike options due to losses from more frequent delta rebalancing in a moving market, leading option sellers to assign higher implied volatility to those strikes to compensate for increased risk. The relationship between index volatility and its components involves both individual volatilities and correlation, with implied correlation as a valuable indicator for pricing dynamics between index options and their components and trading volatility dispersion.

Appearing on The Market Huddle, Kai Volatility’s Cem Karsan emphasized the impact of more structured product issuance and investor volatility selling on index levels, describing how it pins the index and lowers correlation. When a dealer, bank, or market maker on the other side owns options, they need to buy the market when it goes down and sell when it goes up, keeping the index tight and realized volatility low. Much less of this, or even the opposite, is happening in single stocks, so they aren’t experiencing the same level of suppression.

Graphic: Retrieved from The Ambrus Group’s Kris Sidial. Higher short Vega exposure, growing derivative income fund and equity short vol hedge fund AUM, a larger auto-callable market, and record-high dispersion trading flow suppress index vol, posing significant risks.

“As dealers buy and sell index exposure, market makers will attempt to keep the index level and the underlying basket in line via arbitrage constraints,” Newfound Research well explained in their Liquidity Cascades paper. “If dealer hedging has suppressed index-level volatility, but underlying components are still exhibiting idiosyncratic volatility, then the only reconciliation is a decline in correlation.”

SpotGamma’s Brent Kochuba weighs in, noting low correlation typically aligns with interim stock market highs, presenting a potential cause for caution. Examining data since January 2018, Kochuba points out that the SPX’s average close-to-close change is 88 basis points, with the open-to-close average at 70 basis points. This analysis suggests the current SPX implied volatility (IV) is relatively low. While low IV levels can persist, the concern arises as current readings hint at overbought conditions.

“These low IVs can last for some time, but the general point here is that current readings are starting to suggest overbought conditions as index vols are priced for risk-less perfection, and single stock vols expand due to upside call chasing.”

Graphic: Retrieved from SpotGamma. Short-dated S&P 500 implied volatility is compressed. Updated Sunday, January 28, 2024.

Nomura Cross-Asset Macro Strategist Charlie McElligott explains selling volatility, which continues to attract money as it’s been profitable, is a stabilizing trade in most cases. Kris Sidial, Co-Chief Investment Officer at The Ambrus Group, warns it may end spectacularly in his most recent appearances. The situation in China is a cautionary example, where stock volatility triggered a destructive selling cycle as market participants grappled with structured product risk management.

Graphic: Retrieved from Reuters.

Accordingly, for those who perceive a meaningful chance of movement, there is value in owning options, Goldman Sachs Group says, noting they expect more movement than is priced.

Graphic: Retrieved from Goldman Sachs Group via VolSignals.

Karsan, drawing parallels to the unwind of short volatility and dispersion trade from February to March of 2020, says the still-crowded trade can be compared to two sumo wrestlers or colossal plates on the Earth’s core exerting immense pressure against each other. While the trade may appear balanced and continue far longer, the accumulated pressures pose significant risks.

Graphic: Retrieved from JPMorgan Chase & Co via @jaredhstocks.

Major crashes happen when entities must trade volatility and options. Often, the trigger is the inability to cover the margin and meet regulatory requirements, causing a cascading effect.

Karsan, drawing on 25 years of experience, notes a precursor to a crash is a weakening supply of margin puts, particularly the highly convex and far out-of-the-money ones. These options play a significant role during stressful market periods, acting as indicators and drivers of impending crashes. The focus is on their convexity rather than whether they will be in the money, as the margin requirements become a determining factor in their impact on market dynamics. History shows a minor catalyst can lead to a dramatic unwind, turning one week to expiry $0.05 to $0.15 S&P 500 put options into $10.00 overnight.

“Prior to the XIV crash day, … going into the close the last hour, we saw nickel, ten, and five-cent options trade up to about $0.50 and $0.70. They really started to pop in the last hour. And then, the next day, we opened up and they were worth $10.00. You don’t see them go from a nickel to $0.50 very often. If you do, don’t sell them. Buy them, which is the next trade.”

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg.

Setting aside the pessimistic narrative, the current scenario favors continued ownership of risk assets. Cautious optimism surrounds this week’s Quarterly Refunding Announcement (QRA), “depending on how much bill issuance is scaled back and on the absolute funding needs,” CrossBorder Capital explained, coupled with Fed-speak and anticipation of cutting interest rates on falling inflation later this year. Still, according to Unlimited Funds ‘ Bob Elliott, predicting outcomes following this week’s releases lacks an advantage; instead, in this environment of churn, momentum loss, and indicators like low correlation and volatility, last week’s trades for managing potential downside stick out, particularly vis-à-vis volatility skew.

Graphic: Retrieved from SpotGamma. Updated Sunday, January 28, 2024.
Categories
Commentary

Daily Brief For April 18, 2023

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Bank of America Corporation (NYSE: BAC) sees allocations to equities versus bonds falling. That’s amid recession fears. Per EPB, “the cyclical economy has just started to shed jobs today, and leading indicators signal the recession is likely underway.”

“To get advanced warning of recessions, you must look at the construction and manufacturing sectors, even though these two sectors are only 13% of the labor market,” EPB adds, noting traditional indicators’ weakening predictability is not so great to ignore the insight. “It’s clear that the composition of traditional leading indicators remains appropriate, and thus, the current resounding recessionary signal should not be ignored.”

BAC strategist Michael Hartnett said, though, that this “consensus lust for recession” must soon be satisfied. Otherwise, the “pain trade” would be even higher yields and stocks; the S&P 500 (INDEX: SPX) is enjoying an accelerated rally which Jefferies Financial Group (NYSE: JEF) strategists think portends a period of flatness, now, over the coming weeks …

Graphic: Retrieved from Jefferies Financial Group (NYSE: JEF) via The Market Ear.

… and through options expiration (OpEx), typically a poor performance period for the SPX.

Displaying
Graphic: Retrieved from Tier1Alpha. 

Beyond the uninspiring fundamentals, the positioning contexts are supportive. Recall our letters published earlier this year. If the market consolidated and failed to break substantially, then falling implied volatility (IVOL) and time passing would bolster markets and, potentially, help build a platform for a rally into mid-year. A check of fixed-strike and top-line measures of IVOL like the Cboe Volatility Index or VIX confirms options activities are keeping markets intact.

Graphic: Retrieved from Danny Kirsch of Piper Sandler (NYSE: PIPR). “SPX May $4,150.00 call volatility, the lack of realized volatility weighing on the market. Volatility low, not cheap.”

Beyond the rotation into shorter-dated options, just one of the factors exacerbating the decimation of longer-dated volatility, traders’ consensus is that markets won’t move a lot and/or they don’t need to hedge over longer time horizons; traders want punchier exposure to realized volatility (RVOL), and that they can get through shorter-dated options that have more gamma (i.e., exposure to changes in movement), not vega (i.e., exposure to changes in implied volatility).

Graphic: Retrieved from Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE: GS) via Bloomberg.

Consequently, counterparties may be less dangerous to accelerating movement in either direction; hence, the growing likelihood of a period of flatness.

Graphic: Retrieved from SpotGamma.

“Despite the collapse in the 1-month realized volatility, we suspect most vol control funds have scaled into using their longer-term realized vols, which by design, lead to less aggressive rebalancing flows,” Tier1Alpha says. “For example, the 3-month rVol, which is currently driving our model, was essentially unchanged yesterday, which means volatility targets were maintained, and very little additional rebalancing had to occur. So even with the decline in the 1-month vol, overall risk exposure remained the same.”

With IVOL at a lower bound, the bullish impacts yielded by its compressing have largely played out. There may be more to be gained by movements higher in IVOL, in addition to the expiry of many call options this OpEx. By owning protection, particularly far from current prices, you are positioned to monetize on the market downside and non-linear repricings of volatility, as this letter has discussed in recent history. The caveat is that volatility can cluster and revert for longer; hence, your structure matters.

“I am concerned that VIX is underpricing the series of events that we know to expect over the coming weeks,” says Interactive Brokers Group Inc’s (NASDAQ: IBKR) Steve Sosnick. “While there is now an 88% implied likelihood of a 25 basis point hike, the likely path of any potential future hikes and assumed cuts should be more clarified at the meeting and in its aftermath.  And oh, has anyone ever heard the expression “sell in May and go away?”

Graphic: Retrieved from Interactive Brokers Group Inc (NASDAQ: IBKR).

With call skews far up meaningfully steep in some products, still-present low- and zero-cost call structures this letter has talked about in the past remain attractive. If the market falls apart, your costs are low, and losses are minimal. If markets move higher into a “more combustible” position, wherein “volatility is sticky into a rally,” you may monetize your call structures and roll some of those profits into bear put spreads (i.e., buy put and sell another at a lower strike). An alternative option is neutral. Own something such as a T-bill or box spread (i.e., buy call and sell put at one strike and sell call and buy put at another higher strike). Some boxes are yielding upwards of 5.4% as of yesterday’s close.

To end, though the short-dated options activity may prompt cascading events in market downturns, the main issue is the reduced use of longer-dated options; a supply and demand imbalance likely resolves itself with an implied volatility repricing of a great size where longer-dated options outperform those that are shorter-dated.

Our locking in of rates or using the profits of call structures to position for a potential IVOL repricing, particularly in the back half of the year when dealer positioning is less clear, buybacks are to fall off of a cliff, rates may fall, and the boost from short-covering has played its course, is an attractive proposition given the context.

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg. “The S&P 500 (white line) is well above its levels from early March, while the yield on the 3m-2y spread remains in a deep inversion, signifying meaningful expectations of cuts in the months ahead.”

About

Welcome to the Daily Brief by Physik Invest, a soon-to-launch research, consulting, trading, and asset management solutions provider. Learn about our origin story here, and consider subscribing for daily updates on the critical contexts that could lend to future market movement.

Separately, please don’t use this free letter as advice; all content is for informational purposes, and derivatives carry a substantial risk of loss. At this time, Capelj and Physik Invest, non-professional advisors, will never solicit others for capital or collect fees and disbursements. Separately, you may view this letter’s content calendar at this link.

Categories
Commentary

Daily Brief For March 29, 2023

Physik Invest’s Daily Brief is a free newsletter sent to thousands of subscribers daily. Intrigued about what moves markets and how that can impact your financial wellness? Subscribe below.

Graphic updated 7:00 AM ET. Sentiment Risk-On if expected /MES open is above the prior day’s range. Click here for the latest levels. /MES levels are derived from the profile graphic at the bottom of this letter. SqueezeMetrics Dark Pool Index (DIX) and Gamma (GEX) with the latter calculated based on where the prior day’s reading falls with respect to the MAX and MIN of all occurrences available. A higher DIX is bullish. The lower the GEX, the more (expected) volatility. Click to learn the implications of volatility, direction, and moneyness. Breadth reflects a reading of the prior day’s NYSE Advance/Decline indicator. The CBOE VIX Volatility Index (INDEX: VVIX) reflects the attractiveness of owning volatility. UMBS prices via MNDClick here for the economic calendar.

Administrative

The newsletter format needs to evolve a bit. Feedback is welcomed! If you are looking for the link to the daily chart, see the caption below the graphic above. Take care!

Positioning

Fear of contagion prompted demands for protection. Measures of implied volatility or IVOL rose, and consequently, these demands for protection pressured markets.

Since then, fear has ebbed.

Read: Black Swan Funds Have A Moment As Investors Hedge Market Doom

Graphic: Retrieved from TradingView.

Previously, this letter explained for protection to keep its value, there would have to be a shift higher in realized volatility or RVOL. Well, RVOL did not come back in a big way at the index level, as many expected.

Thus, the positive effects of the bank-related stimulation and traders’ pulling forward their timeline for easing were compounded by the unwinding of hedging strategies. 

Read: MBA Data Shows Rate Decline Helped Boost Home-Purchase Applications

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg via SpotGamma. “This drop in 5-day realized vol (orange) is pretty sharp, given it occurred from such a low relative level. ‘Can’t short it, don’t want to buy it.’ This vol decline comes as SPX put open interest was cleared with March OPEX, and big VIX call interest expired last week.”

Previously depressed products like the Nasdaq 100 or NDX, which are generally very sensitive to monetary tightening, have performed well.

Graphic: Retrieved from Callum Thomas’ Topdown Charts.

As we near month-end, there is a quarterly derivatives expiry. Above current S&P 500 or SPX levels is a significant concentration of soon-to-roll-off open interest held short by investors. This means the counterparties are dynamically hedging a call they own; they’re selling strength and buying weakness, albeit in a less and less meaningful way, as those options near this expiration and their probability of paying out (i.e., delta or exposure to direction) falls.

Graphic: Retrieved from Sergei Perfiliev.

Some would allege that volatility compression and time decay would have solicited a more meaningful response from options counterparties at those strike prices above; the absence of downside follow-through had traders supplying previously demanded downside put protection and catalyzing a rally. However, there are not many things for the market to rally on, and so much time has passed that the charm effects (i.e., the impact of time passing on an options delta) have lessened dramatically, some explain.

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg via Liz Young. “The Nasdaq’s Cumulative Advance-Decline line has parted ways with index direction in recent days. In other words, the index has rallied despite weak breadth (more stocks falling than rising), the two lines are likely to find their way back together somehow…”

Therefore, it’s probably likely that the market remains contained through month-end. After, movement may increase. This letter acknowledged RVOL might come back in a big way, particularly with the bank intervention doing more to thwart credit creation.

The caveat is that markets can trade spiritedly for far longer. There is a potential for the markets to move into a far “more combustible” position. With call skews far up meaningfully steep, still-present low- and zero-cost call structures this letter has talked about in the past remain attractive.

Graphic: Retrieved from Charles Schwab Corporation-owned (NYSE: SCHW) thinkorswim.

If the market falls apart, your costs are low, and losses are minimal. If markets move higher into that “more combustible” position, wherein “volatility is sticky into a rally,” you may monetize your call structures and roll some of those profits into bear put spreads (i.e., buy put and sell another at a lower strike).

Daily Brief | February 17, 2023

The signs of a “more combustible situation” would likely show when “volatility is sticky into a rally,” explains Kai Volatility’s Cem Karsan. To gauge combustibility, look to the options market. 

Remember, calls trade at a lower IVOL than puts. As the market trades higher, it slides to a lower IVOL, reflected by broad IVOL measures. If broad IVOL measures are sticky/bid, “that’s an easy way to say that fixed-strike volatility is coming up and, if that can happen for days, that can unpin volatility and create a situation where dealers themselves are no longer [own] a ton of volatility; they start thinning out on volatility themselves, and that creates a more combustible situation.” 

To explain the “thinning out” part of the last paragraph, recall participants often opt to own equity and downside (put) protection financed, in part, with sales of upside (call) protection. More demand for calls will result in counterparties taking on more exposure against movement (i.e., negative gamma) hedged via purchases of the underlying. Once that exposure expires and/or decays, that dealer-based support will be withdrawn. If the assumption is that equity markets are expensive now, then, after another rally, there may be more room to fall, all else equal (a simplistic way to look at this), hence the increased precariousness and combustibility.

Read: Buy-Or-Rent Premium Is Highest Since 2006 Housing Bubble

Graphic: Retrieved from Callum Thomas’ Topdown charts.

About

The author, Renato Leonard Capelj, spends the bulk of his time at Physik Invest, an entity through which he invests and publishes free daily analyses to thousands of subscribers. The analyses offer him and his subscribers a way to stay on the right side of the market. 

Separately, Capelj is an accredited journalist with past works, including interviews with investor Kevin O’Leary, ARK Invest’s Catherine Wood, FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried, North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum, Lithuania’s Minister of Economy and Innovation Aušrinė Armonaitė, former Cisco chairman and CEO John Chambers, and persons at the Clinton Global Initiative.

Connect

Direct queries to renato@physikinvest.com. Find Physik Invest on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, and Instagram. Find Capelj on Twitter, LinkedIn, and Instagram. Only follow the verified profiles.

Calendar

You may view this letter’s content calendar at this link.

Disclaimer

Do not construe this newsletter as advice; all content is for informational purposes. Capelj and Physik Invest are non-professional advisors managing their own capital. They will never openly solicit others for capital or manage others’ capital to collect fees and disbursements.

Categories
Commentary

Daily Brief For March 3, 2023

Physik Invest’s Daily Brief is read free by thousands of subscribers. Join this community to learn about the fundamental and technical drivers of markets.

Graphic updated 7:00 AM ET. Sentiment Risk-On if expected /MES open is above the prior day’s range. /MES levels are derived from the profile graphic at the bottom of this letter. Click here for the latest levels. SqueezeMetrics Dark Pool Index (DIX) and Gamma (GEX) with the latter calculated based on where the prior day’s reading falls with respect to the MAX and MIN of all occurrences available. A higher DIX is bullish. The lower the GEX, the more (expected) volatility. Click to learn the implications of volatility, direction, and moneyness. Breadth reflects a reading of the prior day’s NYSE Advance/Decline indicator. The CBOE VIX Volatility Index (INDEX: VVIX) reflects the attractiveness of owning volatility. UMBS prices via MNDClick here for the economic calendar.

Administrative

Lots of content today but a bit rushed at the desk. If anything is unclear, we will clarify it in the coming sessions. Have a great weekend! – Renato

Fundamental

Physik Invest’s Daily Brief for March 2 talked about balancing the implications of still-hot inflation and an economy on solid footing. Basically, the probability the economy is in a recession is lower than it was at the end of ‘22. For the probabilities to change markedly, there would have to be a big increase in unemployment, for one.

According to a blog by Unlimited’s Bruce McNevin, if the unemployment rate rises by about 1%, recession odds go up by 29%. If the non-farm payroll employment falls by about 2% or 3 million jobs, recession odds increase by about 74%. After a year or so of tightening, unemployment measures are finally beginning to pick up.

Policymakers, per recent remarks, maintain that more needs to be done, however. For instance, the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) Raphael Bostic, who generally carries an easier stance on monetary policy, mulled whether the Fed should raise interest rates beyond the 5.00-5.25% terminal rate consensus he previously endorsed. This commentary, coupled with newly released economic data, has sent yields surging at the front end. 

Graphic: Retrieved from TradingView.

Traders are wildly repricing their terminal rate expectations this week. The terminal rate over the past few days has gone up from 5.25-5.50% to 5.50-5.75%, and back down to 5.25-5.50%.

Graphic: Retrieved from CME Group Inc (NASDAQ: CME).

Positioning

Stocks and bonds performed poorly. Commodity hedges are uninspiring also in that they do not hedge against (rising odds of) recession, per the Daily Brief for March 1

In navigating this precarious environment, this letter has put forward a few trade ideas including the sale of call options structures to finance put options structures, after the mid-February monthly options expiration (OpEx). Though measures suggest “we can [still] get cheap exposure to convexity while a lot of people are worried,” the location for similar (short call, long put) trades is not optimal. Rather, trades including building your own structured note, now catching the attention of some traders online, appear attractive now with T-bill rates surging.

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg.

Such trades reduce portfolio volatility and downside while providing upside exposure comparable to poorly performing traditional portfolio constructions like 60/40.

As an example, per IPS Strategic Capital’s Pat Hennessy, with $1,000,000 to invest and rates at ~5% (i.e., $50,000 is 5% of $1,000,000), one could buy 1000 USTs or S&P 500 (INDEX: SPX) Box Spreads which will have a value of $1 million at maturity for the price of $950,000.

With $50,000 left in cash, one can use options for leveraged exposure to an asset of their choosing, Hennessy explained. Should these options expire worthless, the $50,000 gain from USTs, at maturity, provides “a full return of principal.”

For traders who are focused on short(er)-term movements, one could allocate the cash remaining toward structures that buy and sell call options over very short time horizons (e.g., 0 DTE).

Knowing that the absence of range expansion to the downside, positioning flows may build a platform for the market to rally, one could lean into structures like fixed-width call option butterflies.

For instance, yesterday, Nasdaq 100 (INDEX: NDX) call option butterflies expanded in value ~10 times (i.e., $5 → $50). An example 0 DTE trade is the BUTTERFLY NDX 100 (Weeklys) 2 MAR 23 12000/12100/12200 CALL. Such trade could have been bought near ~$5.00 in debit and, later, sold for much bigger credits (e.g., ~$40.00).

Such trade fits and plays on the narrative described in Physik Invest’s Daily Brief for February 24. That particular letter detailed Bank of America Corporation’s (NYSE: BAC) finding that “volume is uniquely skewed towards the ask early in the day but towards the bid later in the day” for these highly traded ultra-short-dated options.

Graphic: Retrieved from Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE: GS) via Bloomberg. 

Even options insight and data provider SqueezeMetrics agrees: “Buy 0 DTE call.” The typical “day doesn’t end above straddle b/e, but call makes money,” SqueezeMetrics explained. “Dealer and call-buyer both profit. Gap down, repeat.”

Anyways, back to the bigger trends impacted by liquidity coming off the table and increased competition between equities and fixed income.

Graphic: Via Physik Invest. Net Liquidity = Fed Balance Sheet – Treasury General Account – Reverse Repo.

As this letter put forth in the past, if the “market consolidates and doesn’t break,” as we see, the delta buy-back with respect to dropping implied volatility (IVOL) or vanna and buy-back with respect to the passage of time or charm could build a platform for a FOMO-driven call buying rally that ends in a blow-off. 

Graphic: Retrieved from Piper Sandler’s (NYSE: PIPR) Danny Kirsch. Short volatility and short stocks was attractive to trade. As your letter writer put in a recent SpotGamma note: “With IV at already low levels, the bullish impact of it falling further is weak, hence the SPX trending lower all the while IV measures (e.g., VIX term structure) have shifted markedly lower since last week. If IV was at a higher starting point, its falling would work to keep the market in a far more positive/bullish stance.”

Per data by SpotGamma, another options insight and data provider your letter writer used to write for and highly recommends checking out, call buying, particularly over short time horizons, was often tied to market rallies. 

Graphic: Retrieved from SpotGamma via Bloomberg.

“0DTE does not seem to be associated with betting on a large downside movement. Large downside market volatility appears to be driven by larger, longer-dated S&P volume,” SpotGamma founder Brent Kochuba said in the Bloomberg article. “Where 0DTE is currently most impactful is where it seems 0DTE calls are being used to ‘buy the dips’ after large declines. In a way this suppresses volatility.”

Anyways, the signs of a “more combustible situation” would likely show when “volatility is sticky into a rally,” explained Kai Volatiity’s Cem Karsan. To gauge combustibility, look to the Daily Brief for February 17.

Technical

As of 6:50 AM ET, Friday’s regular session (9:30 AM – 4:00 PM ET), in the S&P 500, is likely to open in the upper part of a positively skewed overnight inventory, outside of the prior day’s range, suggesting a potential for immediate directional opportunity.

The S&P 500 pivot for today is $3,988.25. 

Key levels to the upside include $3,999.25, $4,012.25, and $4,024.75.

Key levels to the downside include $3,975.25, $3,965.25, and $3,947.00.

Disclaimer: Click here to load the updated key levels via the web-based TradingView platform. New links are produced daily. Quoted levels likely hold barring an exogenous development.

Graphic: 65-minute profile chart of the Micro E-mini S&P 500 Futures.

Definitions

Volume Areas: Markets will build on areas of high-volume (HVNodes). Should the market trend for a period of time, this will be identified by a low-volume area (LVNodes). The LVNodes denote directional conviction and ought to offer support on any test.

If participants auction and find acceptance in an area of a prior LVNode, then future discovery ought to be volatile and quick as participants look to the nearest HVNodes for more favorable entry or exit.

Vanna: The rate at which the Delta of an option changes with respect to implied volatility.

Charm: The rate at which the Delta of an option changes with respect to time.

POCs: Areas where two-sided trade was most prevalent in a prior day session. Participants will respond to future tests of value as they offer favorable entry and exit.

MCPOCs: Denote areas where two-sided trade was most prevalent over numerous sessions. Participants will respond to future tests of value as they offer favorable entry and exit.

Options Expiration (OPEX): Reduction in dealer Gamma exposure. Often, there is an increase in volatility after the removal of large options positions and associated hedging.

Options: Options offer an efficient way to gain directional exposure.

If an option buyer was short (long) stock, he or she could buy a call (put) to hedge upside (downside) exposure. Additionally, one can spread, or buy (+) and sell (-) options together, strategically.

Commonly discussed spreads include credit, debit, ratio, back, and calendar.

  • Credit: Sell -1 option closer to the money. Buy +1 option farther out of the money.
  • Debit: Buy +1 option closer to the money. Sell -1 option farther out of the money.
  • Ratio: Buy +1 option closer to the money. Sell -2 options farther out of the money. 
  • Back: Sell -1 option closer to the money. Buy +2 options farther out of the money.
  • Calendar: Sell -1 option. Buy +1 option farther out in time, at the same strike.

Typically, if bullish (bearish), sell at-the-money put (call) credit spread and/or buy a call (put) debit/ratio spread structured around the target price. Alternatively, if the expected directional move is great (small), opt for a back spread (calendar spread). Also, if credit spread, capture 50-75% of the premium collected. If debit spread, capture 2-300% of the premium paid.

Be cognizant of risk exposure to the direction (Delta), movement (Gamma), time (Theta), and volatility (Vega). 

  • Negative (positive) Delta = synthetic short (long).
  • Negative (positive) Gamma = movement hurts (helps).
  • Negative (positive) Theta = time decay hurts (helps).
  • Negative (positive) Vega = volatility hurts (helps).

About

The author, Renato Leonard Capelj, spends the bulk of his time at Physik Invest, an entity through which he invests and publishes free daily analyses to thousands of subscribers. The analyses offer him and his subscribers a way to stay on the right side of the market. 

Separately, Capelj is an accredited journalist with past works including interviews with investor Kevin O’Leary, ARK Invest’s Catherine Wood, FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried, North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum, Lithuania’s Minister of Economy and Innovation Aušrinė Armonaitė, former Cisco chairman and CEO John Chambers, and persons at the Clinton Global Initiative.

Connect

Direct queries to renato@physikinvest.com. Find Physik Invest on TwitterLinkedInFacebook, and Instagram. Find Capelj on TwitterLinkedIn, and Instagram. Only follow the verified profiles.

Calendar

You may view this letter’s content calendar at this link.

Disclaimer

Do not construe this newsletter as advice. All content is for informational purposes. Capelj and Physik Invest manage their own capital and will not solicit others for it.

Categories
Commentary

Daily Brief For February 23, 2023

Physik Invest’s Daily Brief is read free by thousands of subscribers. Join this community to learn about the fundamental and technical drivers of markets.

Graphic updated 6:30 AM ET. Sentiment Neutral if expected /MES open is inside of the prior day’s range. /MES levels are derived from the profile graphic at the bottom of this letter. Click here for the latest levels. SqueezeMetrics Dark Pool Index (DIX) and Gamma (GEX) with the latter calculated based on where the prior day’s reading falls with respect to the MAX and MIN of all occurrences available. A higher DIX is bullish. The lower the GEX, the more (expected) volatility. Click to learn the implications of volatility, direction, and moneyness. Breadth reflects a reading of the prior day’s NYSE Advance/Decline indicator. The CBOE VIX Volatility Index (INDEX: VVIX) reflects the attractiveness of owning volatility. UMBS prices via MNDClick here for the economic calendar.

Fundamental

Bloomberg’s John Authers summarized well the release of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting minutes. He said that almost all officials “supported a step down in the pace of tightening by 25 basis points, while a ‘few’ favored or could have supported a bigger 50 basis-point hike. Nobody wanted to stop straightaway.”

“Participants observed that a restrictive policy stance would need to be maintained until the incoming data provided confidence that inflation was on a sustained downward path to 2%, which was likely to take some time,” the minutes said.

Graphic: Retrieved from Royal Bank of Canada (NYSE: RY). 

Notwithstanding hits to markets like housing, which news has concentrated on, the S&P 500 (INDEX: SPX) is trading about 18x forward price-to-earnings, Bank of America Corporation (NYSE: BAC) said, the highest since March 2022 and 20% above the last decade’s average P/E

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg.

Per Savita Subramanian, “the traditional Rule of 20 … holds that the multiple should be whatever number results by subtracting the inflation rate from 20 — which with inflation at 6.4% would imply that the P/E needs to fall to 13.6.”

Graphic: Retrieved from Bank of America Corporation (NYSE: BAC) via Bloomberg.

Recall yesterday’s letter discussing the “risk-reward of holding bonds [looking] better than equity (earnings yield).”

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg’s Lisa Abramowicz. “Yields on 12-month T-bills have risen to their highest since 2001. Most of this has to do with Fed rate hike expectations.”

Positioning

The SPX’s decline is orderly and contained. 

However, the break below $4,000.00 SPX did open the door to a “liquidity hole,” SpotGamma explained. New information has traders anticipating more equity market downside; traders are “reset[ing] to lower equity valuations” on the higher-for-longer rate narrative all the while “vanna and gamma hedging serve to pull markets lower.”

The contexts for a far-reaching rally are weakA change in the context is likely to coincide with charged options values (i.e., wound implied volatility or big put delta).

Technical

As of 6:30 AM ET, Thursday’s regular session (9:30 AM – 4:00 PM ET), in the S&P 500, is likely to open in the middle part of a positively skewed overnight inventory, inside of the prior day’s range, suggesting a limited potential for immediate directional opportunity.

The S&P 500 (FUTURE: /MES) pivot for today is $4,012.25. 

Key levels to the upside include $4,024.75, $4,034.75, and $4,045.25.

Key levels to the downside include $4,003.25, $3,992.75, and $3,981.00.

Disclaimer: Click here to load the updated key levels via the web-based TradingView platform. New links are produced daily. Quoted levels likely hold barring an exogenous development.

Graphic: 65-minute profile chart of the Micro E-mini S&P 500 Futures.

Definitions

Volume Areas: Markets will build on areas of high-volume (HVNodes). Should the market trend for a period of time, this will be identified by a low-volume area (LVNodes). The LVNodes denote directional conviction and ought to offer support on any test.

If participants auction and find acceptance in an area of a prior LVNode, then future discovery ought to be volatile and quick as participants look to the nearest HVNodes for more favorable entry or exit.

Delta: An option’s exposure to the direction or underlying asset movement.

Gamma: The sensitivity of an option’s delta to changes in the underlying asset’s price.

Vanna: The rate at which the delta of an option changes with respect to implied volatility.

POCs: Areas where two-sided trade was most prevalent in a prior day session. Participants will respond to future tests of value as they offer favorable entry and exit.


About

The author, Renato Leonard Capelj, works in finance and journalism.

Capelj spends the bulk of his time at Physik Invest, an entity through which he invests and publishes free daily analyses to thousands of subscribers. The analyses offer him and his subscribers a way to stay on the right side of the market. Separately, Capelj is an options analyst at SpotGamma and an accredited journalist.

Capelj’s past works include conversations with investor Kevin O’Leary, ARK Invest’s Catherine Wood, FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried, North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum, Lithuania’s Minister of Economy and Innovation Aušrinė Armonaitė, former Cisco chairman and CEO John Chambers, and persons at the Clinton Global Initiative.

Connect

Direct queries to renato@physikinvest.com. Find Physik Invest on TwitterLinkedInFacebook, and Instagram. Find Capelj on TwitterLinkedIn, and Instagram. Only follow the verified profiles.

Calendar

You may view this letter’s content calendar at this link.

Disclaimer

Do not construe this newsletter as advice. All content is for informational purposes. Capelj and Physik Invest manage their own capital and will not solicit others for it.

Categories
Commentary

Daily Brief For February 22, 2023

Physik Invest’s Daily Brief is read free by thousands of subscribers. Join this community to learn about the fundamental and technical drivers of markets.

Graphic updated 7:15 AM ET. Sentiment Neutral if expected /MES open is inside of the prior day’s range. /MES levels are derived from the profile graphic at the bottom of this letter. Click here for the latest levels. SqueezeMetrics Dark Pool Index (DIX) and Gamma (GEX) with the latter calculated based on where the prior day’s reading falls with respect to the MAX and MIN of all occurrences available. A higher DIX is bullish. The lower the GEX, the more (expected) volatility. Click to learn the implications of volatility, direction, and moneyness. Breadth reflects a reading of the prior day’s NYSE Advance/Decline indicator. The CBOE VIX Volatility Index (INDEX: VVIX) reflects the attractiveness of owning volatility. UMBS prices via MNDClick here for the economic calendar.

Fundamental

We look beyond all the doom-and-gloom narrative to the bond-equity divergence which JPMorgan Chase & Co’s (NYSE: JPM) Marko Kolanovic wrote about recently.

Essentially, regressions suggest the move in interest rates since the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) meeting earlier this month should have resulted in a 5-10% sell-off in the rate-sensitive Nasdaq. It didn’t. Per Kolanovic, “this divergence cannot go much further.”

Recall interest rates matter to discounted future cash flows. The higher rates are the, worse that is for equities, says Damped Spring’s Andy Constan well in an interview. 

Interest rates matter elsewhere as well. When interest rates increase, “a mortgage goes down in price by a greater amount than the bond because the expected maturity of the mortgage becomes longer. The magnitude of this unbalanced price volatility characteristic is measured by a financial statistic called ‘convexity.’” Managing this convexity can be problematic and force feedback loops, just as we talk about with options per the below. See here for more.

Graphic: The “Biggest tail risk to SPX isn’t any macro data/virus/war but its own options market.”

Kolanvoic ends: The “risk-reward of holding bonds at this level of short-term yields looks better than equity (earnings yield) than any time since the great financial crisis (i.e., the spread between 2y and equity earnings yield is at the lowest point since 2007).”

Graphic: Retrieved from JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE: JPM).

Positioning

This letter said there would be movement after last week’s options expirations (OpEx). 

To quote the February 15 letter, ignoring the “excellent” liquidity and traders buying S&P 500 (INDEX: SPX) “hand over fist,” OpEx would result in a decline in counterparty exposure to positive gamma (i.e., positive exposure to movement). Support from an options positioning perspective would decline, and counterparties would “do less to disrupt and more to bolster movement.”

That’s along the lines of what’s happening, though the movement appears orderly.

Per SpotGamma, “The selling appears contained, as evidenced by an upward trending [implied volatility or IVOL] term structure and light bid in topline measures of [IVOL] like the [Cboe Volatility Index (INDEX: VIX)].” Notwithstanding this light bid at the front of the term structure, there is no rush to protect, as would be evidenced by longer-dated IVOL shifting “materially higher as traders reset to lower equity valuations.”

Graphic: Retrieved from SpotGamma. “SPX term structure today vs 2/13 (day prior to CPI). Traders had higher vol expectations for CPI vs today’s FOMC minutes, but [the] term structure is now more elevated. Makes sense as SPX [is] -3% lower. However, the loss of stabilizing OPEX positioning, elevated IV, & flat gamma may lead to higher relative vol today.”

With there being many options positions concentrated near the $4,000.00 SPX area, markets may be at risk of accelerated selling. Below $4,000.00 traders desire to own predominantly puts, and this leaves counterparties “short puts and [] positive delta, as well as negative gamma and vega, meaning they lose money in an increasing way as the market trades lower and volatility increases.” To hedge, counterparties could sell futures or stocks into the decline. This accelerates selling.

Graphic: Retrieved from SpotGamma.

So, with a break of that big $4,000.00 level increasing risk that selling accelerates, the desire to protect will bid IVOL and the marginal impact of its expansion can do more damage than good that any marginal compression can do.

Graphic: Retrieved from SpotGamma. “IV has now compressed to levels associated with recent market tops. If realized vol (RV) declined, then IV could go lower. But, realized isn’t declining.”

In light of this, your letter writer leans negative delta, as well as positive gamma and vega. If the market trades lower, such a setup would make money in short.

Technical

As of 7:15 AM ET, Wednesday’s regular session (9:30 AM – 4:00 PM ET), in the S&P 500, is likely to open in the middle part of a negatively skewed overnight inventory, inside of the prior day’s range, suggesting a limited potential for immediate directional opportunity.

The S&P 500 pivot for today is $3,998.25. 

Key levels to the upside include $4,015.75, $4,034.75, and $4,052.25.

Key levels to the downside include $3,981.00, $3,965.25, and $3,949.00.

Disclaimer: Click here to load the updated key levels via the web-based TradingView platform. New links are produced daily. Quoted levels likely hold barring an exogenous development.

Graphic: 65-minute profile chart of the Micro E-mini S&P 500 Futures.

Definitions

Volume Areas: Markets will build on areas of high-volume (HVNodes). Should the market trend for a period of time, this will be identified by a low-volume area (LVNodes). The LVNodes denote directional conviction and ought to offer support on any test.

If participants auction and find acceptance in an area of a prior LVNode, then future discovery ought to be volatile and quick as participants look to the nearest HVNodes for more favorable entry or exit.

Gamma: The sensitivity of an option’s Delta to changes in the underlying asset’s price.

CPOCs: Denote areas where two-sided trade was most prevalent over all sessions. Participants will respond to future tests of value as they offer favorable entry and exit.

POCs: Areas where two-sided trade was most prevalent in a prior day session. Participants will respond to future tests of value as they offer favorable entry and exit.

MCPOCs: Denote areas where two-sided trade was most prevalent over numerous sessions. Participants will respond to future tests of value as they offer favorable entry and exit.

Inversion Of VIX Futures Term Structure: Longer-dated VIX expiries are less expensive; is a warning of elevated near-term risks for equity market stability.


About

The author, Renato Leonard Capelj, works in finance and journalism.

Capelj spends the bulk of his time at Physik Invest, an entity through which he invests and publishes free daily analyses to thousands of subscribers. The analyses offer him and his subscribers a way to stay on the right side of the market. Separately, Capelj is an options analyst at SpotGamma and an accredited journalist.

Capelj’s past works include conversations with investor Kevin O’Leary, ARK Invest’s Catherine Wood, FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried, North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum, Lithuania’s Minister of Economy and Innovation Aušrinė Armonaitė, former Cisco chairman and CEO John Chambers, and persons at the Clinton Global Initiative.

Connect

Direct queries to renato@physikinvest.com. Find Physik Invest on TwitterLinkedInFacebook, and Instagram. Find Capelj on TwitterLinkedIn, and Instagram. Only follow the verified profiles.

Calendar

You may view this letter’s content calendar at this link.

Disclaimer

Do not construe this newsletter as advice. All content is for informational purposes. Capelj and Physik Invest manage their own capital and will not solicit others for it.

Categories
Commentary

Daily Brief For February 17, 2023

Physik Invest’s Daily Brief is read by thousands of subscribers. You, too, can join this community to learn about the fundamental and technical drivers of markets.

Graphic updated 6:30 AM ET. Sentiment Risk-Off if expected /ES open is below the prior day’s range. /ES levels are derived from the profile graphic at the bottom of this letter. Click here for the latest levels. SqueezeMetrics Dark Pool Index (DIX) and Gamma (GEX) with the latter calculated based on where the prior day’s reading falls with respect to the MAX and MIN of all occurrences available. A higher DIX is bullish. At the same time, the lower the GEX, the more (expected) volatility. Click to learn the implications of volatility, direction, and moneyness. Breadth reflects a reading of the prior day’s NYSE Advance/Decline indicator. The CBOE VIX Volatility Index (INDEX: VVIX) reflects the attractiveness of owning volatility. UMBS via MNDClick here for the calendar.

Administrative

The plan was to have a talk about big geopolitical themes but, in tying some loose ends and keeping with the spirit of the options-induced armageddon narrative, we push this to next week. Have a great weekend!

Positioning

Despite maintaining that markets are potentially due for weakness, Kai Volatility’s Cem Karsan brought up some interesting points, yesterday.

Essentially, despite liquidity coming off the table and increased competition between equities and fixed income, hence big bond inflows and equity outflows, if the “market consolidates and doesn’t break,” the delta buy-back with respect to dropping implied volatility (IVOL) or vanna and buy-back with respect to the passage of time or charm could build a platform for a FOMO-driven call buying rally that ends in a blow-off.

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg. “US stocks have a new competitor: cash. For more than a decade, the only real virtue of leaving money on deposit has been optionality. It means you can jump quickly on opportunities as they arise. But now it offers a competitive yield.”

The signs of this “more combustible situation” would likely show when “volatility is sticky into a rally,” adds Karsan. To gauge combustibility, look to the options market.

Remember calls trade at a lower IVOL than puts. As the market trades higher, it slides to a lower IVOL, and that’s reflected by broad IVOL measures. If broad IVOL measures are sticky/bid, “that’s an easy way to say that fixed-strike volatility is coming up and, if that can happen for days, that can unpin volatility and create a situation where dealers themselves are no longer [own] a ton of volatility; they start thinning out on volatility themselves, and that creates a more combustible situation.”

To explain the “thinning out” part of the last paragraph, recall participants often opt to own equity and downside (put) protection financed, in part, with sales of upside (call) protection. If there’s more demand for calls, that will result in counterparties taking on more exposure against movement (i.e., negative gamma) hedged via purchases of the underlying. Once that exposure expires and/or decays, that dealer-based support will be withdrawn. If the assumption is that equity markets are expensive now, then, after another rally, there may be more room to fall, all else equal (a simplistic way to look at this), hence the increased precariousness and combustibility.

Technical

As of 6:30 AM ET, Friday’s regular session (9:30 AM – 4:00 PM ET), in the S&P 500, is likely to open in the lower part of a negatively skewed overnight inventory, far outside of the prior day’s range (i.e., a lot of shock and range expansion already happened), suggesting a higher than normal potential for immediate directional opportunity.

The S&P 500 pivot for today is $4,071.75. 

Key levels to the upside include $4,083.75, $4,104.25, and $4,122.75.

Key levels to the downside include $4,052.25, $4,034.75, and $4,015.75.

Disclaimer: Click here to load the updated key levels via the web-based TradingView platform. New links are produced daily. Quoted levels likely hold barring an exogenous development.

Graphic: 65-minute profile chart of the Micro E-mini S&P 500 Futures.

Definitions

Volume Areas: Markets will build on areas of high-volume (HVNodes). Should the market trend for a period of time, this will be identified by a low-volume area (LVNodes). The LVNodes denote directional conviction and ought to offer support on any test.

If participants auction and find acceptance in an area of a prior LVNode, then future discovery ought to be volatile and quick as participants look to the nearest HVNodes for more favorable entry or exit.

Gamma: The sensitivity of an option’s Delta to changes in the underlying asset’s price.

Vanna: The rate at which the Delta of an option changes with respect to implied volatility.

Charm: The rate at which the Delta of an option changes with respect to time.


About

The author, Renato Leonard Capelj, works in finance and journalism.

Capelj spends the bulk of his time at Physik Invest, an entity through which he invests and publishes free daily analyses to thousands of subscribers. The analyses offer him and his subscribers a way to stay on the right side of the market. Separately, Capelj is an options analyst at SpotGamma and an accredited journalist.

Capelj’s past works include conversations with investor Kevin O’Leary, ARK Invest’s Catherine Wood, FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried, Lithuania’s Minister of Economy and Innovation Aušrinė Armonaitė, former Cisco chairman and CEO John Chambers, and persons at the Clinton Global Initiative.

Connect

Direct queries to renato@physikinvest.com or find Physik Invest on TwitterLinkedInFacebook, and Instagram.

Calendar

You may view this letter’s content calendar at this link.

Disclaimer

Do not construe this newsletter as advice. All content is for informational purposes.

Categories
Commentary

Daily Brief For February 16, 2023

Physik Invest’s Daily Brief is read by thousands of subscribers. You, too, can join this community to learn about the fundamental and technical drivers of markets.

Graphic updated 6:15 AM ET. Sentiment Neutral if expected /ES open is inside of the prior day’s range. /ES levels are derived from the profile graphic at the bottom of this letter. Click here for the latest levels. SqueezeMetrics Dark Pool Index (DIX) and Gamma (GEX) with the latter calculated based on where the prior day’s reading falls with respect to the MAX and MIN of all occurrences available. A higher DIX is bullish. At the same time, the lower the GEX, the more (expected) volatility. Click to learn the implications of volatility, direction, and moneyness. Breadth reflects a reading of the prior day’s NYSE Advance/Decline indicator. The CBOE VIX Volatility Index (INDEX: VVIX) reflects the attractiveness of owning volatility. UMBS price via MNDClick here for the calendar.

Positioning

In the news is quite a bit of noise surrounding ultra-short-dated options with little time to expiry. To quote Nomura Holdings Inc’s (NYSE: NMR) Charlie McElligott, the trading of these options is adding noise; “US equities are such an untradable mess right now.” 

However, your letter writer, who mainly trades complex spreads on the cash-settled indexes, thinks there has never been a better time to trade. Ultra-short-dated options enable you to express your opinion in more efficient ways. Additionally, the trade of these options, in the aggregate, can influence market movements, and this is added opportunity if you understand it.

Graphic: Retrieved from Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE: GS) via Bloomberg.

Darrin Johnson, a volatility trader, recently discussed sharp ways to use these options.

Heading into some big events this week, John noted S&P 500 (INDEX: SPX) implied volatility (IVOL) was trading at ~25% on a five-day straddle. Traders could buy this structure while, in the interim, selling other structures like it “against CPI, Retail Sales, and PPI” where IVOL was higher. This would enable you to lower the cost of having positive exposure to movement or positive gamma via the five-day straddle, though this is operating on the premise “that Friday’s volatility will hold mostly steady, while the other 3 deflate.”

Moreover, the ultra-short-dated options are palatable if we will, and other traders, potentially much bigger in size, are observant of this too. The growing interest in these products (e.g., in the second half of last year, ultra-short-dated options made up more than 40% of the S&P 500’s trading volume) is growing in impact on underlying products like the SPX.

In fact, JPMorgan Chase & Co’s (NYSE: JPM) Peng Cheng found these options have an impact that “can vary from a drag of as much as 0.6% to a boost of up to 1.1%.” 

To explain, though as of late options counterparties may be playing a smaller role as “customers have taken equal and opposite sides” of positions, per SqueezeMetrics, we can naively look at there being a pool of liquidity to absorb the demand for these ultra-short-dated options which are very sensitive to time, price, and volatility. These increased sensitivities are hedged in a way that impacts this available pool of liquidity. If the trade or impact is large enough, it is transmitted onto underlying market prices. 

For instance, consider so-called meme mania and stocks like GameStop Corporation (NYSE: GME) that rocketed as traders’ interest in short-dated options demands rose. To hedge increased demand in call options, for instance, counterparties must buy the underlying stock. This demand boosts the stock.

Likewise, if traders’ consensus is that markets won’t move much until some large macroeconomic events, then their bets against market movement (i.e., sell ultra-short-dated options) will result in counterparties having more exposure to bets on market movement (i.e., positive gamma) which they will hedge in a way that reduces market movement (i.e., buy weakness or sell strength in the underlying stock). So, if traders bet against the movement, resulting in more counterparty positive gamma, then market movement is reduced due to the reaction to this positioning.

On the other hand, if traders’ consensus is that markets may move a lot, particularly to the downside, their bets on market movement (e.g., buy ultra-short-dated put) will result in counterparties having more exposure to bets against market movement (i.e., negative gamma). This demand for protection will bid options prices, particularly at the front-end of the IVOL term structure as counterparties price this demand in, and the counterparty will sell underlying to hedge. If fears are assuaged and traders no longer demand these bets on market movements, the counterparty can unwind their hedge which, in the put buying example provided, may provide a market boost, such as that which we saw immediately following the release of consumer price updates (CPI) this week; to quote Bloomberg, “[w]hen the worst didn’t happen, these hedges were unwound, helping propel a recovery in futures. It’s partly why the Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, dropped 7% in a seemingly outsize reaction in a market when the S&P 500 ended the session basically flat.”

Graphic: Retrieved from Bloomberg.

Additionally, the re-hedging-inspired recovery was short-lived as well; the impact of ultra-short-dated options, as this letter has stated before, is short-dated. It, too, does much less to influence measures like the Cboe Volatility Index (INDEX: VIX), a floating measure of ~30 day-to-expiry SPX options trading at a fixed-strike IVOL, though it does have an impact. Thus, the dis-interest to hedge stocks traders do not own (or hedge further stocks that may be hedged) out in time, does less to boost the VIX.

Anyways, in January, your letter writer interviewed The Ambrus Group’s co-CIO Kris Sidial about major risks to markets in 2023, as well as reasons why volatility could outperform in 2023 and beyond. Some of the information in that Benzinga interview made it into this newsletter in the days following its release. 

Basically, the SPX and VIX complexes are growing and, on the other side, are a small concentrated group of market makers taking on far more exposure to risk. 

Graphic: Retrieved from Ambrus’ publicly available research.

During moments of stress, as we’ve seen in the past with GME for example, options counterparties may be unable to keep up with the demands of investors, so you get a reflexive dynamic that helps push the stock higher. “That same dynamic can happen on the way down”; counterparties will mark up options prices during intense selling. As the options prices rise, options deltas (i.e., their exposure to direction) rise and this prompts so-called bearish vanna counterparty hedging flows in the underlying.

“Imagine a scenario where [some disaster happens] and everybody starts buying 0 DTE puts. That’s going to reflexively drive the S&P lower,” Sidial said. “Take, for example, the JPMorgan collar position that clearly has an effect on the market, and people are starting to understand that effect. That’s just one fund. Imagine the whole derivative ecosystem” leaning one way.

Graphic: Retrieved from Ambrus’ publicly available research.

Well, that’s what JPM’s Marko Kolanovic just said is a major risk and could exacerbate market volatility. “While history doesn’t repeat, it often rhymes,” he explained, noting that the trade of ultra-short-dated options portends a Volmageddon 2.0. If you recall, in 2018, Volmageddon 1.0 turned successful long-running short-volatility trades on their head when traders who were betting against big movements in the market saw their profits erode in days.

Further, to conclude this section since your letter writer is running short on time, as Sidial said, “if you’re trading volatility, let there be an underlying catalyst for doing so.” From a “risk-to-reward perspective, … it’s a better bet to be on the long volatility side,” given “that there are so many things that … keep popping up” from a macro perspective. Check out our letters from the past weeks where we talked about protecting profits (e.g., sell call vertical to finance and buy a put vertical with a lot of time to expiry).

For Ambrus’ publicly available research, click here. Also, follow Sidial on Twitter, here. Consider reading your letter writer’s past two conversations with Sidial, as well. Here is an article on 2021 and the meme stock debacle. Here is another article talking more about Ambrus’ processes.

Technical

As of 6:15 AM ET, Thursday’s regular session (9:30 AM – 4:00 PM ET), in the S&P 500, is likely to open in the lower part of a balanced overnight inventory, inside of the prior day’s range, suggesting a limited potential for immediate directional opportunity.

The S&P 500 pivot for today is $4,153.25. 

Key levels to the upside include $4,168.75, $4,189.00, and $4,206.25.

Key levels to the downside include $4,136.25, $4,122.75, and $4,104.25.

Disclaimer: Click here to load the updated key levels via the web-based TradingView platform. New links are produced daily. Quoted levels likely hold barring an exogenous development.

Graphic: 65-minute profile chart of the Micro E-mini S&P 500 Futures.

Definitions

Volume Areas: Markets will build on areas of high-volume (HVNodes). Should the market trend for a period of time, this will be identified by a low-volume area (LVNodes). The LVNodes denote directional conviction and ought to offer support on any test.

If participants auction and find acceptance in an area of a prior LVNode, then future discovery ought to be volatile and quick as participants look to the nearest HVNodes for more favorable entry or exit.

POCs: Areas where two-sided trade was most prevalent in a prior day session. Participants will respond to future tests of value as they offer favorable entry and exit.


About

The author, Renato Leonard Capelj, works in finance and journalism.

Capelj spends the bulk of his time at Physik Invest, an entity through which he invests and publishes free daily analyses to thousands of subscribers. The analyses offer him and his subscribers a way to stay on the right side of the market. Separately, Capelj is an options analyst at SpotGamma and an accredited journalist.

Capelj’s past works include conversations with investor Kevin O’Leary, ARK Invest’s Catherine Wood, FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried, Lithuania’s Minister of Economy and Innovation Aušrinė Armonaitė, former Cisco chairman and CEO John Chambers, and persons at the Clinton Global Initiative.

Connect

Direct queries to renato@physikinvest.com or find Physik Invest on TwitterLinkedInFacebook, and Instagram.

Calendar

You may view this letter’s content calendar at this link.

Disclaimer

Do not construe this newsletter as advice. All content is for informational purposes.

Categories
Commentary

Daily Brief For January 12, 2023

Physik Invest’s Daily Brief is read by thousands of subscribers. You, too, can join this community to learn about the fundamental and technical drivers of markets.

Graphic updated 8:45 AM ET. Sentiment Neutral if expected /ES open is inside of the prior day’s range. /ES levels are derived from the profile graphic at the bottom of this letter. Levels may have changed since initially quoted; click here for the latest levels. SqueezeMetrics Dark Pool Index (DIX) and Gamma (GEX) with the latter calculated based on where the prior day’s reading falls with respect to the MAX and MIN of all occurrences available. A higher DIX is bullish. At the same time, the lower the GEX, the more (expected) volatility. Click to learn the implications of volatility, direction, and moneyness. Breadth reflects a reading of the prior day’s NYSE Advance/Decline indicator. The CBOE VIX Volatility Index (INDEX: VVIX) measure reflects the total attractiveness of owning volatility.

Administrative

A quick letter today, apologies.

Given the large, post-CPI movement, the above dashboard may be out of date!

Separately, your letter writer will be heading to Davos, Switzerland during next week’s World Economic Forum. Let me know if you’ll be in town. Take care!

Fundamental

Today, market participants received data that appears in line with estimates.

Expected was a 6.5% rise year-over-year (YoY) and a 0.1% fall month-over-month (MoM). These numbers were +7.1% and +0.1% the release prior.

Mattering most is core inflation, which the Fed has more control over. The expectation was that core CPI rose 5.7% YoY and 0.3% MoM. In the release prior, these numbers were 6.0% and 0.2%, respectively.

Overall, the view that inflation is trending in the right direction is supported.

We often unpack the implications, but we will save that for a coming analysis.

Positioning

We saw meaningful outperformance in realized volatility (RVOL). This was, in part, a result of increased demand for short-dated exposures to movements (i.e., gamma), as well as a supply of farther-dated volatility (i.e., +gamma worked, +vega did not).

The trends, as your letter writer explained in recent write-ups, and in a Benzinga article, may eventually exhaust; measures like the VVIX, which is the volatility of the VIX or the volatility of the S&P 500’s volatility, are printing at levels seen in 2017. 

According to Kai Volatility’s Cem Karsan, markets are in a transition period and what’s worked in 2022 may not work as well in 2023; trades are becoming crowded and S&P 500 volatility skews have hit a lower bound of sorts. That was echoed by The Ambrus Group’s Kris Sidial who said that “we can get cheap exposure to convexity while a lot of people are worried.”

Since the start of the year, the skew shifted meaningfully higher while the S&P 500 and VIX have moved higher in sync, as well. Some, like SpotGamma, have their own explanation (e.g., the fear of missing out on a move higher results in call buying that bids volatility), expressing that this may be a trend that persists through events like Thursday’s consumer price update.

This letter’s takeaway is as follows. Markets can experience more of the same. As history has shown, the right trade may turn out to be short volatility across longer time horizons, and long/own volatility across shorter time horizons, for longer (i.e., current trends promoting realized volatility outperformance may persist longer).

However, should current trends persist, the market is likely to become far less well-hedged, as Karsan said in the video. If a catalyst arises, there may be a repricing in volatility which traders would not want to be on the wrong side of. Notwithstanding, as Sidial says, “[if] you’re trading volatility, let there be an underlying catalyst for doing so.” Don’t just buy it because it is cheap, or sell it because it is expensive.

We’ll go through the charts and implications in far more detail over the coming sessions. Your letter writer is stretched for time this morning. Take care!

Technical

As of 7:30 AM ET, Thursday’s regular session (9:30 AM – 4:00 PM ET), in the S&P 500, is likely to open in the upper part of a positively skewed overnight inventory, outside of prior-range and -value, suggesting a potential for immediate directional opportunity.

Our S&P 500 pivot for today is $3,988.25 HVNode. 

Key levels to the upside include $4,000.25, $4,011.75, and $4,028.75.

Key levels to the downside include $3,979.75, $3,959.00, and $3,943.25.

Click here to load today’s key levels into the web-based TradingView platform. All levels are derived using the 65-minute timeframe. New links are produced, daily. 

As a disclaimer, the S&P 500 could trade beyond the levels quoted in the letter. Therefore, you should load the above link on your browser for more relevant levels.

Graphic: 65-minute profile chart of the Micro E-mini S&P 500 Futures.

Definitions

Volume Areas: Markets will build on areas of high-volume (HVNodes). Should the market trend for long periods of time, it will be identified by low-volume areas (LVNodes). LVNodes denote directional conviction and ought to offer support on any test.

If participants auction and find acceptance in an area of a prior LVNode, then future discovery ought to be volatile and quick as participants look to HVNodes for favorable entry or exit.

POCs: Denote areas where two-sided trade was most prevalent in a prior day session. Participants will respond to future tests of value as they offer favorable entry and exit.

MCPOCs: Denote areas where two-sided trade was most prevalent over numerous sessions. Participants will respond to future tests of value as they offer favorable entry and exit.


About

In short, an economics graduate working in finance and journalism.

Capelj spends most of his time as the founder of Physik Invest through which he invests and publishes daily analyses to subscribers, some of whom represent well-known institutions.

Separately, Capelj is an equity options analyst at SpotGamma and an accredited journalist interviewing global leaders in business, government, and finance.

Past works include conversations with investor Kevin O’Leary, ARK Invest’s Catherine Wood, FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried, Lithuania’s Minister of Economy and Innovation Aušrinė Armonaitė, former Cisco chairman and CEO John Chambers, and persons at the Clinton Global Initiative.

Contact

Direct queries to renato@physikinvest.com or Renato Capelj#8625 on Discord.

Calendar

You may view this letter’s content calendar at this link.

Disclaimer

Do not construe this newsletter as advice. All content is for informational purposes.