The Denver Post

DENVER HEDGE FUND WINS BIG ON WILD MARKET

Recent volatility ends up producing more than $17 million profit off a $200,000 investment

- By Dani Burger

Not everyone got crushed when the market collapsed.

For traders at a little-known Denver hedge fund who saw it coming, it was the score of a lifetime — a $17.5 million payday on a $200,000 bet.

“People were laughing at us, saying this could never happen, this should never happen,” Justin Borus, the 41year-old founder and manager at Denver-based Ibex Investors, said in an interview. “We saw people pricing this as a 1-in-5,000 event, but it was more like a one-in-five-year event.”

Borus’ team bet that an exchangetr­aded fund linked to a calm stock market would go to zero in the event of suddenly volatile trading. The ETF almost did — it lost 96 percent of its value.

Borus said they always believed in the wager, even when just about no one else did. But the jackpot still caught them by surprise. Two of the group — Ari Rubin and Cooper Stainbrook — were taking a long walk around the Colorado capital when the market started to go haywire on Feb. 5.

As they walked, the two of them — Ibex’s director and chief data scientist— were on the phone with a client and in passing mentioned rare, socalled black-swan events. The client told them to check out the VIX Index (the Chicago Board Options Exchange’s Volatility Index, which measures expected market turbulence).

“We came back to our screen and we’re watching the VIX and it’s moving with extreme velocity,” said Rubin, a former Israeli Defense Force soldier and ski bum turned money manager. “We’re laughing at every tick up until we realized what was going on. Cooper just looks at me and goes, ‘Oh, man. The Vol-pocolypse just happened.’ ”

What was happening was the biggest

plunge for U.S. equities in more than six years. Concerns that inflation was seeping into the economy triggered a decline in the Dow Jones Industrial Average that reached 6.3 percent at its lowest level. The benchmark index for equity volatility rose to more than twice its level the day before, crushing bettors who’d gotten used to years of very low volatility.

For about a year, Ibex had been buying options on the ProShares Short VIX Short-Term Futures ETF, ticker SVXY. The executives wouldn’t comment publicly on the exact mechanics of the trade or its profit, but they were detailed in a research note published by an adviser to the firm, Pravit Chintawong­vanich of Macro Risk Advisers. Owning the contracts fit into the 15-yearold fund’s niche-product strategies. As of January, the 20-person firm managed about $350 million.

Ibex’s plan was to profit when five years of a record-calm stock market burst into a spasm of volatility.

Other investors may have been lulled by the years of relative serenity in the stock markets. The average volatility rate for 2017 was lower than every single trading day from Dec. 22, 1995, to June 20, 2005. The VIX finished below a level of 10 on only nine days be- fore May 2017 and 68 days since.

They went shopping for the right derivative­s to place their bet. Brokers responded with ridicule —options speculatin­g the inverse VIX would go to zero would never pay off.

“Cooper and I go to New York a lot,” Rubin said. “In one instance, someone actually laughed in our faces at the type of options we were looking at.”

On Jan. 2, the managers put down $200,000 on what looked like a lottery ticket, with each SVXY put costing 34 cents. On Feb. 6, they sold the 6,300 contracts at about $28 each, leaving them with $17.5 million.

The firm had been in frequent contact with Chintawong­vanich, who’d been warning that the VIX notes could blow up for a while. Ibex was one of the few clients who actually heeded his warning, he said.

“Before this happened, I looked like the boy who cried wolf,” Chintawong­vanich said. “There’s a risk that was underprice­d by the market which we’ve been pointing out for a long time, and one of our clients capitalize­d on it, and I’m really happy for them.”

Ibex gives partial credit to a view of the Rocky Mountains outside the firm’s window. They’re 2,000 miles from New York and the convention­al wisdom that said VIX ETPs could never blow up.

After a sleepless Monday night, Rubin and Stainbrook celebrated by going skiing.

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