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VolX contemplates rates, metals and stock volatility contracts

13 Dec 2010

Article by: Siân Williams
Published by: Futures and Options Intelligence
Date: 13 Dec 2010

“The Volatility Exchange (VolX) is considering launching contracts on the volatility of metals, rates and stock indices, its chief executive told FOi.

“The exchange has a patented methodology which calculates realised volatility over a specific time period. It uses closing prices of an asset over a defined period of one, three or twelve months to calculate the asset’s volatility over that period. It contrasts with the VIX methodology, which uses options to calculate implied volatility. Implied volatility is based on perceived volatility and realised volatility is actual volatility.

“The products are similar to volatility swaps and variance swaps, which are…”

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Posted in Hedging, Realized volatility, Trading ideas

 

On the informational content of implied volatility

10 Dec 2010

Article by: Juan Carlos Sosa
Published by: Boston College
Date: 1 Jan 2000

“Previous literature examines whether the volatility estimates implicit in option prices constitute accurate forecasts of future volatility for the underlying asset. Most studies address two questions. Do Black-Scholes implied volatilities predict future volatilities? Do they incorporate all past time series information? The empirical answers to both questions are conflicting. However, previous studies typically find that implied volatilities overestimate future volatilities. Christensen & Prabhala (98) provide evidence of a structural shift in the pricing mechanism of OEX options around the Crash of ’87. In contrast with the pre-Crash results of Canina & Figlewski (93), CP show that after the Crash implied volatilities predict future volatilities and dominate moving average forecasts. They also show that implied volatilities are unbiased, and that errors-in-variables is responsible for previous bias findings. The objective of this dissertation is fourfold. First, we implement encompassing regressions on a recent sample of OEX options. Our full-sample findings are consistent with other studies that support the informational efficiency of implied volatilities in recent years. However, the regressions are very sensitive to the degree of moneyness of implied volatility. Furthermore, we find that the degree of predictive power of implied volatility is strongly time-frame dependent. Second, we show that implied volatilities do overestimate realized volatilities and that CP’s unbiasedness finding is due to an ill choice of instrument, in addition to a low test power. Third, we attempt to correct for potential misspecification in the encompassing regressions and find that lagged implied volatility is important. Yet, we show that the significance of lagged implied volatility is not a symptom of market inefficiency, but of skewness-related model error in implied volatility estimates. Finally, we assess the economic value of informational efficiency via a trading analysis, and find it to be quite limited. In summary, we find that at-the-money implied volatilities are biased estimators of realized volatility, that they suffer from substantial model error, that their predictive power is time-frame dependent, and that moving average estimators perform just as well from an economic point of view.”

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Posted in Implied volatility, Realized volatility

 

The VIX, CIV, and MFIV — Measuring up the accuracy of option-based predictors of volatility

06 Dec 2010

Article based on the Research of Torben Andersen And Oleg Bondarenko
Published by: Kellog Institute
Date: Sep 2080

“Beyond growth and leverage, a key factor in the value of a given stock, and the broader market, is volatility, or the magnitude of variation in prices over time. Especially in today’s uncertainty-ridden market including a major credit crisis and declining dollar, investors pay sizeable premiums to be hedged against increases in volatility, which typically represent bad market conditions. So it is no surprise that there has been growing market and academic interest in equity-index volatility measures. The best-known volatility measure is the volatility index, or VIX, established by the Chicago Board of Options Exchange (CBOE) in 1993. Practitioners and business scholars have established that the VIX, which is based on real-time option market prices for the S&P 500 stock index, correlates significantly with future equity market volatility as well as global risk factors embedded in credit and sovereign debt spreads. Thus the VIX has also become known as the “global fear index”—the higher the VIX, the greater the concern about global markets. In response, multiple public and over-the-counter markets have emerged to enable direct trading of volatility for different assets—using the methodology behind the VIX—rather than more traditional volatility measures based on the Black-Scholes options pricing model.

“The great practical interest in forecasting volatility raises two key questions: How accurate is the VIX as a predictor of actual future return volatility? And, are there more accurate alternative predictors based on option market prices?

“To answer these questions, Torben G. Andersen, professor of finance at Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management, and co-author Oleg Bondarenko conducted a study of the construction, interpretation, and predictive value of the VIX and several other option-based volatility measures….”

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Posted in Implied volatility

 

2nd Quarter 2010 Volatility Monitor

02 Dec 2010

Article by: John W. Labuszewski
Published by: CME Group
Date: 8 Jul 2010

“Volatility is one of several key inputs into mathematical option on futures pricing models along with market price, strike price, term until expiration and short-term interest rates. While market price movements exert the most obvious impact upon the option premium, volatility remains a very important factor. So much so that many traders strive to predict future levels of volatility and engage in socalled ‘volatility plays’ as a result.

“Traders may ‘buy volatility’ generally by buying options; or, ‘sell volatility’ by selling options, often in concert with the placement of a hedge in the futures market structured by reference to the net delta associated of the option positions.

“This report represents an update of volatility through the 2nd quarter 2010″

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Posted in Trading ideas

 
 
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