VIX, Brexit And Goodhart’s Law

 | Jul 01, 2016 07:38AM ET

The US market witnessed a 5.3% two-day drop after the UK referendum. Global markets lost $2T overall in just one day. Apparently, the market did not see the Brexit coming, at least not all of the investors. While some renowned investors such as Jim Rogers opine that a black-swan blowout is going to hit the market, investor resilience managed to pull the S&P 500 back by 4.9% in just three sessions, erasing over 90% of the Brexit loss. Given the quick short-term round trip after the Brexit outcome, did the market price Brexit wrong?

The VIX is one of the tools widely used to track market attitudes towards upcoming events. The VIX uses both call and put options on the S&P 500 companies over the next 30 days to calculate their index. The level of VIX directly indicates agent behavior and positively correlates with market concern over the upcoming period. Starting from two weeks prior to Brexit, the VIX did start moving upward; however, the volatility indicator gradually fell back to a moderate level till the night of the Brexit vote. Temporarily alleviated concerns were accompanied by the S&P 500’s approaching its former all-time high level above the 2100 line. Clearly, the market did not believe UK would leave EU.