Risk Aversion Hits The Markets With A Lot More Fuel For The Fire

 | Aug 25, 2015 01:26AM ET

Risk aversion turned severe for certain corners of the financial system to start this week. In particular, equities faced extraordinary selling pressure which led to dramatic declines in stock benchmarks and the volatility indexes that are derived from their options. However, the threat likely runs deeper than just this recent aggressive drop reflects. While we can look at individual stocks, currencies or asset classes and identify factors to show how over-leveraged it might be; there is a systemic exposure that speaks more broadly to the risks that the market faces. And, to truly appreciate how much more selling we may face, it is important to understand the position of sentiment.

The vast majority of coverage in the financial market’s bludgeoning Monday was dedicated to the equity market. In particular, the S&P 500 suffered a remarkably severe stumble. The drop on the day was the single biggest in four years and the volume behind e-mini futures (futures are taking up more of the speculation than outright shares and the index) hit a similar historical peak. From the VIX, the surge was not only a multi-year high but one of the largest notional jumps in the index on record.