The ‘Hyper-Crash’ Is Coming – It’s Not The Everything Bubble, It’s The Global Short Volatility Bubble
Two weeks ago, we discussed the recent report from Artemis Capital Management, “Volatility and the Alchemy of Risk – Reflexivity in the Shadows of Black Monday 1987”, authored by Christopher Cole. See “In the Shadows Of Black Monday – “Volatility Isn’t Broken…The Market Is”. The full report can be accessed here.
In the Global Short Volatility Bubble:
- We are in an unprecedented bear market in fear, i.e. falling volatility, thanks to the unconventional monetary policies of central banks;
- Instead of being an external measure of risk, volatility has become a tradeable input – making it reflexive in nature;
- As volatility falls, investors (using leverage) take bigger bets in the same direction, so lower volatility begets lower volatility.
- The global short volatility trade is more than $2 trillion;
- It consists of explicit short volatility trades and implicit short volatility trades, e.g. risk parity and accumulated equity share buybacks (price insensitive/buy the dip);
- Due to reflexivity, in any shock to the system which starts an unwind in the global short volatility trade, higher volatility will reinforce higher volatility;
- The markets are effectively converging into what’s known in option markets as a ‘naked short straddle’ – as volatility declines, the upfront premium (yield) declines while non-linear risk rises;
- Non-linear risk has four components – rising volatility, gamma risk, unstable cross-asset correlations and rising interest rates;
- Volatility is the most undervalued asset class in the world;
- The unwind of the global short volatility trade would lead to a sudden hyper-crash, similar but worse than 1987.
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