VIX Closing Below 10 Level, Shock Factor Being Priced Out Of Markets

 | May 29, 2017 02:40AM ET

A light session in US trade on Friday it may have been, with volumes running some 25% below the 30-day average through the S&P 500. However, one can still make money in a low volume environment and new highs have been seen and we should see Asian markets open on somewhat of a firmer footing.

Predictably, the low volatility environment continues to be a dominant theme, with the US volatility index (“VIX”) closing firmly below the 10 level. “When in doubt sell volatility”, the hedge funds cry and that continues to be a trade that has worked well for some time. Everything from central banks seems so predictable these days, even Trump is predictable when it comes to saying something outrageous and the shock factor is being priced out of markets.

However, throw in extremely low implied volatility (“VIX”), low realised volatility, solid earnings from US, European and Japanese corporates and you can see why so few are expecting range expansion and price volatility to be on-going dominant theme to any great degree going forward.

So the on-going grind higher in the US and developed equities should continue in my opinion. The Emerging market trade I have been pushing is now looking quite good, with the EEM (Emerging Markets ETF) breaking to the highest levels since May 2015 – happy to stay long here for now.

There has also been a renewed focus on the market breadth of late in US equities too, given around 30% of the gains this year in the S&P 500 have come from Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Google and Facebook (NASDAQ:FB). However, if we look at the market internals we can see 18% of companies at a four-week high, which is fairly low considering the index is at an all-time high, but not terrible. If anything, it tells me there is further upside here, especially when you see a mere 59% of S&P 500 companies trading above their 50-day moving average. There are just no signs of euphoric conditions and the index is not over loved in any way.

We can also see broad financial conditions continue to improve, with the Bloomberg US financial conditions index pushing up to the highest level since September 2014. The week ahead see’s Trump back on home soil after a dominant trip abroad and one suspects he, Kushner et al will retain their spot in the limelight for all the wrong reasons.

(Bloomberg financial conditions index – rate hikes are supposed to tighten conditions)