Khaleej Times

Investors are hedging, but stealthily

- Saqib Iqbal Ahmed

new york — With the US stock market at a record high and daily stock gyrations near multi-decade lows, some investors have raised concerns about the lack of fear in the market, but US equity options market data suggests investors are far from complacent.

Positionin­g in options on S&P 500 index and CBOE Volatility Index shows investors have been gradually adding to hedges over the last few months.

“We didn’t see it on our desk and no one seems to care much about hedging but somehow it’s happening,” said Jim Strugger, derivative­s strategist, MKM Partners in New York. “It’s sort of under the surface, more like stealth hedging,” he said.

The S&P 500 index has climbed 16 per cent this year and is on pace for its eighth straight month of gains, the longest such streak since just before the 2007-2009 financial crisis.

The CBOE Volatility Index, better known as the VIX and the most widely followed barometer of expected near-term stock market volatility, closed at a record low earlier this month.

Some investors warn that heightened reliance on strategies that profit from continued calm in stocks, and months of frustratio­n over hedges that have gone to waste while the market powered on, have left the market extremely vulnerable to a shock.

Boom-time complacenc­y should top the worry list for investors, according to participan­ts in the recent Reuters Global Investment 2018 Outlook Summit in New York.

The options market, however, suggests that investors are not as vulnerable to a sell-off in stocks as the anaemic level of the VIX would suggest, analysts said.

For instance, for the S&P 500 index options, there are 2.1 puts open for each open call contract, close to the most defensive this measure has been over the last five years, according to options analytics firm Trade Alert data.

An index call option gives the holder the right to buy the value of an

We didn’t see it on our desk and no one seems to care much about hedging but somehow it’s happening

Jim Strugger, derivative­s strategist, MKM Partners

underlying index at a fixed level in the future. A put conveys the opposite right and is usually used to protect against declines in the index.

While some of put activity may be due to investors selling puts to generate income, brisk put volume suggests renewed interest in protective positions, analysts said.

“More often than not, even in the world we live in where volatility is so attractive to sell, you can make a fair assumption that people are buying options,” said MKM’s Strugger.

VIX options also show similarly elevated positionin­g in out-of-themoney VIX calls — contracts that are not profitable yet would reap gains if volatility spikes.

“When open interest on VIX outof-the-money calls is really high, I would tend to think that the market is more aggressive­ly hedged,” said Aashish Vyas, director of portfolio strategy at Durango, Coloradoba­sed Swan Global Investment­s. “To me, that matters more than the absolute level of the VIX,” he said.

Positionin­g in options on SPDR S&P 500, iShares Russell 2000, the PowerShare­s QQQ Trust also show healthy defensive positionin­g.

While the data does not suggest that the market is gearing up for an immediate crash, as would be suggested if the VIX were to shoot up, it does imply that investors would not be taken by surprise if volatility starts to trend up in coming months.

“I don’t think the market is complacent,” said Joe Tigay, chief trading officer at Equity Armor Investment­s in Chicago. “People have downside protection,” he said. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters ?? A trader works inside a booth on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
— Reuters A trader works inside a booth on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

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