Inter-Market Analysis And Macro Insights: 10_11_18

 | Oct 11, 2018 02:34AM ET

Volatility has made a comeback in a big way, and it has seemingly come out of nowhere and hit traders square in the chops.

Statistically, we don’t see eight Z-score moves often in any data set. It is an extreme event, but that is precisely when played out in the S&P 500 yesterday. While the moves we see in Asia today, relative to the 90-day average daily moves, have been statistically extreme, and volumes are huge too. We can take the ASX 200 and see value 40% above the 30-day average (for this time of day), and in Japan and Hong Kong, value is 40% and 91% above the average.

Without seeing the institutional flow, it feels as though this is a mix of forced selling, absolutely no buyers, and naturally, in this environment, the short sellers are having a field day aligning positions to what is a falling knife.

The biggest issue being asked on the floors today is what exactly caused the sell-down. The fact that there is no one smoking gun breeds uncertainty, as the market craves to understand what is the trigger mechanism so they can understand what could be the circuit breaker to gain confidence to buy the dip - which is what everyone is programmed to do these days.

The technical set up of the S&P 500 is key here and was a chart I posted yesterday, where we looked at the symmetrical risks, with the index at a critical juncture. Well, the path the market choose is there for all to see. We can even take things back and see the rising trend drawn from the 2016 lows at 2775 ahead of the 200-day moving average at 2765, and logically the bulls simply have to defend these levels tonight, or we can really start talking about a genuine index correction.

Given the further 0.8% drawdown in S&P 500 futures through Asia today, it suggests that if the S&P 500 cash market were to open now, then it would open through both of these levels. We shall watch with interest, as we will in tech stocks which are just getting taken to the woodshed, where the FANGS basket closed 5.6% lower and breaking out of a multi-month channel. One suspects that if implied volatility (vols) keep heading high, then volatility targeting funds will only further raise cash levels, while implied vol is also such an important consideration for trader’s position sizing, and right now with the level of range expansion we have seen this should be kept to a minimum.

The US 30-year Treasury has also been on the radar for a while, and the upcoming cash session will also garner strong attention. As we can see from the daily chart, duration buyers are kicking into gear, and we see yield under last Wednesday spike high. That said, if we look at the sizeable build in short UST 30-year futures of late (in the weekly CFTC report), perhaps we are seeing an element of short-covering here ahead of tonight’s $15 billion 30-year UST auction, which is really going to tests the markets interest in owning duration and having exposures to the ultra-long end of the curve.

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