I don’t think the recent blow-off in Treasury bonds is over. I created a bear spread on IEF (7 to 10 year Treasuries), selling-to-open January S90 calls at 3.24 and buying S94 calls at 0.41. The net credit was $2.83 and the worst case loss is $1.17. The spread for this combo order was bid 2.65 and ask 3.05. I tried credit orders at 2.90 and 2.85 before I got a fill at 2.83—which went immediately when I put it in. Seems fairly typical that if I give the market maker a nickel more than splitting the bid/ask difference (2.85) the order will fill. I like combo orders rather than limit orders because I don’t have to commit to a price for a specific option, the market maker has to make that trade-off.
The Archives
Short VXX – short XIV backtest
This spreadsheet allows you to enter in any trading date between 30-Jan-2009 and 11-Nov-2011 to backtest the profit/loss performance of a short VIX / short XIV strategy. See this post for more information and example charts. See ordering information at the very bottom of this post.
Volatility tickers
I have collected what I believe is all the active tradable volatility ETNs / ETFs in the US markets together in this list.
You can expand the table, or search for a specific ticker if you don’t see the one you want.
Adds variable SP 500 short component
Ticker/Quotes Description / Time frame Daily activity? / underlying index Company website / Prospectus Comments / Posts
^VIX (Yahoo)
$VIX (Schwab)
VIX (Fidelity)
VIX:IND (Bloomberg)
.VIX (Reuters)CBOE Volatility Index® (1 month)
Model free est. of SPX 30 day implied volatilityVIX
Derived from SPX optionsCBOE / Not investible
CVOL/TVIX/UVXY--closest to a direct VIX investment
Hybrid Long / Short
XVZ iPath S&P 500 Dynamic VIX ETN
VIX/VXV based short/long 1-2 month, long 4,5,6,7 futuresDynamic mix of short/long short term futures combined with long medium term SPDVIXTR XVZ Website
XVZ prospectus*Backtest to 2004
*Under the hood
*Hedging High Yield Bonds
XVIX UBS E-TRACS Daily Long-Short VIX ETN
Daily rebalance to preserve -.5x short term, 1x medium allocation. Not daily percentage.
SPVXTSER UBS XVIX +1x roll 4,5,6,7 month VX - .5x 1-2 month VX
VQT SPY plus a variable VXX component VQT SPVQDTR VQT prospectus A covered call that's long volatility
Long Volatility (1-2 month VX)
VXX iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures ETN
Roll futures SPVXSTR:IND Barclays VXX website Barclays VXX prospectus options available
VIXY (ETF) ProShares VIX Short-Term Futures ETF Roll futures VIXY ProShares (VXX clone)
options available
VIIX VelocityShares Daily Long VIX Short-Term ETN Roll futures SPVXSP:IND VelocityShares (VXX clone)
VXAA UBS Daily Inverse VIX Short-Term ETN Daily rebalance UBS ETRACS
2X Long Volatility (1-2 month VX)
TVIX VelocityShares Daily 2X VIX Short-Term ETN Daily rebalance SPVXSP:IND VelocityShares
UVXY (ETF) ProShares ETF Daily rebalance
SPVXSPID:INDUVXY website / prospectus options available
Short Volatility (1-2 month VX)
XIV VelocityShares Daily Inverse VIX Short-Term ETN Daily rebalance SPVXSP:IND VelocityShares -1x percentage, Termination with -80% daily move
IVOP Path Inverse S&P 500 VIX Short Fixed at inception SPVXSP:IND Barclays' IVOP Prospectus Termination price=$10, VXX would be greater than ~63.4
AAVX UBS Daily Inverse VIX Short-Term ETN Daily rebalance UBS ETRACS -1x percentage
XXV iPath Inverse S&P 500 VIX Short (July 2020 exp) Fixed at inception SPVXSP:IND Barclays' XXV Prospectus VXX short Not Recommended!
SVXY (ETF) ProShares ETF SPVXSPID:IND ProShares SVXY website/prospectus options available
Long Volatility
VXBB(2-3 month VX) Daily rebalance
SPVIX2MTUBS ETRACS
Short Volatility
BBVX(2-3 month VX) Daily rebalance
SPVIX2MTUBS ETRACS
Long Volatility
VXCC(3-4 month VX) SPVIX3MT UBS ETRACS
Short Volatility
CCVX(3-4 month VX) SPVIX3MT UBS ETRACS
UBS -1X inverse funds prospectusTermination < $5 or >60% daily negative move
2X Long Volatility (3-4 month) VX Daily rebalance
CVOL C Tracks ETN Daily rebalance + monthly adj to short S&P weighting CVOLE:IND C-Tracks website
Citigroup CVOL prospectus
Long Volatility
VXDD(4-5 month VX) SPVIX4MT UBS ETRACS
Short Volatility
DDVX(4-5 month VX) SPVIX4MT UBS ETRACS -1x percentage, Termination with -80% daily move
Long Volatility
(4-5-6-7 month) VX
VXZ iPath S&P 500 VIX Mid-Term Futures ETN (options available) Roll futures SPVXMTR:IND Barclays VXZ website
Barclays VXZ
VIXM (ETF) ProShares VIX Mid-Term Futures ETF Roll futures SPVXMPID:IND ProShares (VXZ clone)
options available
VIIZ VelocityShares Daily Long VIX Medium-Term ETN Roll futures SPVXMP:IND VelocityShares (VXZ clone)
VXEE UBS Daily Long VIX Medium-Term ETN Daily Rebalance UBS ETRACS
2X Long Volatility (4-5-6-7 month) VX
TVIZ VelocityShares Daily 2X VIX Medium-Term ETN Daily rebalance SPVXMP:IND VelocityShares Limited share creation resumed
VZZB iPath® Long Enhanced S&P 500 VIX Mid-Term Futures™ ETN (II) Fixed at inception SPVXMTR:IND VZZB Prospectus Termination price=$10
Short Volatility (4-5-6-7 month) VX
ZIV VelocityShares Daily Inverse VIX Medium-Term ETN Daily rebalance SPVXMP:IND VelocityShares Inverse roll 4,5,6,7 month VX
ZIV backtest
EEVX UBS ETRACS Daily rebalance SPVXMP:IND UBS ETRACS
UBS -1X inverse funds prospectus-1x percentage, Termination with -60%? daily move
Long Volatility
VXFF(5-6-7-8 month VX) SPVIX6MT UBS ETRACS
Short Volatility
FFVX(5-6-7-8 month VX) SPVIX6MT UBS ETRACS
UBS -1X inverse funds prospectus-1x percentage, Termination with -60%? daily move
Other Volatility Indexes
VXV CBOE 3 month volatility (S&P500) VXV CBOE (not investible)
VXAZN CBOE Amazon VIX (AMZN)
VX Volatility Futures (on right) Volatility Futures CFE
VXAPL CBOE Apple VIX (AAPL)
GVZ CBOE Gold VIX (GLD) CBOE Gold Volatilty Micro Site
VXGOG CBOE Google VIX (GOOG)
VXGS CBOE Goldman Sachs VIX (GS)
VXIBM CBOE IBM VIX (IBM)
VXN CBOE Nasdaq 100 Volatility Index
OVX CBOE OIL VIX (USO)
VXSLV CBOE Sliver VIX (SLV)
Volatility Settlement
VRO CBOE,Fidelity,...
^VRO Yahoo
$VRO SchwabVIX settlement value (once per month) VRO
Volatility Related Indexes Some of the ancillary indexes used by volatility ETNs/ETFs
SPXT S&P 500 Total Returns index (includes dividends) SPXT:IND
USB3MTA:IND 3 Month Treasure Bill Yield USB3MTA:IND
Tickers included: CVOL, IVO (short), STPP, TVIX, TVIZ, UVXY, SVXY,VIIX, VIIZ, VIX, VIXM, VIXY, VQT(strategy), VX (futures), VXX, VXZ, XIV(short), XOIL (oil), XVIX (strategy), XXV (short), ZIV (short), XVZ, SPVXSTR, SPVXMTR, SPXT, USB3MTA, SPVXTSER
IVV dividends
CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) Futures data 2004 – 2012
The CBOE posts historical volatility futures quotes, but not in a particularly helpful organization. Each expiration month has a separate spreadsheet, which currently adds up to 95 different spreadsheets from May 2004 to July 2012. Adding to the difficulties, there are four expiration months in the early years that didn’t exist at all that led to a lot of missing data and a reverse split along the way.
I have created a spreadsheet that integrates all of this data from March 2004 through January 2012 into a single master sheet, and interpolates / extrapolates missing data. This spreadsheet makes it much easier to analyze topics like volatility contango/backwardation over time, computing the rolling averages used by almost all the existing volatility ETNs/ ETFs, and looking at term structures. The master spreadsheet for a small subset of dates is shown below.
I am making this spreadsheet available for purchase, but be aware this is not a turn-key solution. Because of the CBOE’s data use restrictions detailed in their terms and conditions I cannot provide the raw data—you will need to download all 95 spreadsheets yourself and include them into the spreadsheet as separate sheets. It is not hard, but it takes a couple hours of drudgery to do this. However once this is accomplished you are ready to go.
A readme sheet with detailed instructions is included with the download. Email (vh2solutions@gmail.com) and phone (970-430-6092) support is included with purchase. I have offered the spreadsheet in both xls and xlsx (Excel 2007 or newer) versions. The advantage of the xlsx version is that it calculates faster and has better charting capabilities. Go to the very bottom portion of this post to buy this spreadsheet.
Under the hood of Citigroup’s CVOL volatility ETN
This baby is built for speed—not distance.
Fortified with several cups of coffee I took on the tough stuff in Citigroup’s CVOL pricing supplement. The other volatility ETNs (e.g., VXX, VXZ) limit themselves to various combinations of volatility futures—CVOL adds a variable leveraged short S&P 500 position. I’ve been wondering why this component was included—I was hoping that it was intended to reduce the negative “roll yields” that have plagued most volatility ETNs. However my analysis indicates the S&P500 short position is designed to improve CVOL’s match to the day-to-day moves of the VIX cash index. A noble goal, but not the one I wanted.
Just using leveraged (2X) 3 and 4-month volatility contracts CVOL would have achieved about a 0.83 statistical correlation with the day-to-day moves of the VIX index in 2010. Adding the short S&P500 factor boosts that up to 0.86 (anything above 0.7 is considered to be highly correlated). Unfortunately, at least in 2010, this short position would have resulted in a faster decay than a pure daily roll from 3 to 4 month volatility contracts. Over 2010 I project CVOL would have lost about 61% of its value, which compares to the year-to-date VIX index dropping 20% and VXX losing 71%. It isn’t surprising that a short S&P500 position in a rising market hurts.
The modeling
To make this analysis more manageable, and to get around the fact that I don’t have historic data on many of the moving parts of CVOL, I made some simplifying assumptions. The graph at the end of this post suggests these assumptions didn’t materially change the results. My simplifications:
- I ignored the interest earned putting unused cash in 90 day treasury bills (current yields would produce about 0.4% per year)
- The short S&P 500 component used in CVOL includes the cost of dividends that a short position would incur—I ignored the dividend part (currently running around 2% per year).
- I ignored the 1.15% per year investor fee (which is assessed daily at 1.15%/365)
- Lacking data for the rolling position in 3rd and 4th month volatility futures, I used Barclay’s VXZ ETN—which rolls 4,5,6,7 month contracts. VXZ probably has less volatility and lower yield roll, but I suspect the differences are relatively minor.
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If you don’t use its S&P500 factor, CVOL’s daily returns compared with the VIX index would look like this for mid October through December 17th:
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Not Bad. But if you add their S&P500 short component (weighting is updated monthly), it looks better still:
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If you could have invested $1K in the VIX index, VXX, and CVOL, at the beginning of 2010 your results would looked something like this:
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CVOL appears to perform much better than VXX in matching the index, but still suffers considerably from yield roll. The final graph below adds the actual CVOL prices from its introduction till December 17th. I adjusted the investment values of the actual vs. hypothetical CVOLs to match at the November 15th introduction.
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The path match between CVOL’s actual vs hypothetical values appears to validate that my calculations are fundamentally correct and that my simplifications don’t overly skew the results. If you are interested downloading the spreadsheet I used for these calculations and these charts visit this post.
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SPY dividend for 4th quarter 2010
SPY went ex-dividend December 17th, 2010. The payout will be $0.6528 per share. The paydate will be 31-January-2011.
In premarket on the 17th SPY was trading around 124.17, after closing at 124.82 in regular trading Thursday. It looks like some poor soul had a buy order in at 124.74 that filled in the pre-market—ex-dividend day drops at the beginning of trading are one of the dangers of standing limit orders.
JNK dividend history and ex-dividend / pay dates
Ex-Dividend and Pay Date information from SPDR
Ex-dividend 1-Feb-11 1-Mar-11 1-Apr-11 2-May-11 01-Jun-11 1-Jul-11 1-Aug-11 1-Sep-11 3-Oct-11 1-Nov-11 1-Dec-11 28-Dec-11
Pay Date 9-Feb-11 9-Mar-11 11-Apr-11 10-May-11 09-Jun-11 12-Jul-11 9-Aug-11 12-Sep-11 11-Oct-11 9-Nov-11 9-Dec-11 6-Jan-12
For ex-dividend information about other ETFs see ETF dividend information, including ex-div and pay dates.
For dividend history on other ETFs see Dividend history.














