VIX At Lowest Level Ever Could Be Connected To French Elections

 | Apr 05, 2017 01:49AM ET

As the stock market appears headed towards a land where storytelling might be winning the day, odd occurrences are taking place by elevated policy uncertainty .” But more ominous is a volatility term structure inversion is occurring in Europe, a CBOE volatility expert first points out. Is there a connection to the upcoming French Election ?h3 VIX is odd, very odd/h3

Wasn’t the story being told market participants that the “Trump rally” was based in part on legislative accomplishment? With a legislative agenda now in question and whiffs of a $1 trillion fiscal stimulus in the offing – and important details regarding how the cost will be paid conspicuously absent – coming alongside potential constitutional questions involving Russia, a question persists. How is stock market volatility, as measured by the CBOE VIX index, is at historically low levels?

Not only low levels, but the term structure is inverted, The Wall Street Journal first reported. The front month futures contract is higher priced than the back month, a particular oddity in the VIX index. “This typically happens during periods of market stress, for example, a selloff in equities,” Macro Risk Advisors analyst Pravit Chintawongvanich explained to ValueWalk. “If the curve is inverted, the market is essentially saying that it expects volatility to be higher in the near term, but revert back to lower levels in the longer term.”

But this inversion has people scratching their heads. “What’s odd is that the VIX curve inverted at very low levels without any market stress event, he noted. “What’s happening is that the front month April VIX futures are staying bid ahead of the French elections, since they are priced off S&P options that capture both rounds of French voting. Essentially, the US options market is starting to price in some risk premium for the French elections when it previously had not.”

In fact, volatility is at all-time lows amid such uncertainty is a calm that is unnerving market professionals like nails on a chalkboard.

Goldman Sachs noted with an odd sense of irony the average CBOE VIX reading in the first quarter was 11.69, the lowest in history. It wasn’t just the average low, but the tight range of prices that caught Goldman’s options analyst Krag Gregory’s eye. It was Gregory who noted odd volatility patterns preceding the surprise Trump election. Low volatility was a persistent trend, trading in a range from 10.6 and 13.1 over the first quarter. Realized volatility over the more recent past tells a tale of abnormal volatility, the fourth lowest level since the Great Depression. Typically when volatility is high the stock market is trading at a value level.

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