Volatility White Papers and Presentations

Below I’ve collected links to some of my favorite white papers and presentations on volatility. I’ve organized them in the following categories:

  • Volatility Concepts & Volatility Trading
  • Probability Distributions—Normal and Otherwise
  • The VIX and VIX Futures
  • Volatility Contagion—Will Short Volatility Destroy the World?
  • Variance Swaps—the Technology That Underlies VIX & VIX Futures

For an index of my 60+ posts on volatility see here.

 

Volatility Concepts & Volatility Trading

  • Volatility: A New Return Driver?” by Greggory Flinn & Roger Schreiner
    • A good non-mathematical overview of volatility, volatility products including futures and a couple example trading strategies using volatility Exchange Traded Products
  • Easy Volatility Investing by Tony Cooper
    • Available via free download on the SSRN repository, this paper provides a good non-mathematical overview of volatility investing. It includes a good discussion on the Volatility Risk Premium (VRP) which is an important concept.  It also provides detailed analysis of several volatility based trading schemes
  • Volatility Trading: Trading Volatility, Correlation, Term Structure and Skew” Bennett & Gil
    •  Over 200 pages of wide-ranging information—from covered calls to exotic options, to links between CDS spreads and implied volatility.  Something for everyone.
  • “Understanding the Link Between Volatility and Compound Returns” David Varadi
    • A lucid post with great links on what is sometimes called “Volatilty Drag”

Probability Distributions—Normal and Otherwise 

  • Tales of the Unexpected by Andrew Haldane
    • This accessible paper (only one equation) is the best that I’ve ever read on the differences between processes accurately modeled by Gaussian/normal distributions and those better matched by power law distributions. I have seen this distinction made many times, but this paper provided examples and reasoning that really helped me internalize the differences.   Most of our stock market computations (including Black & Scholes for option pricing) and risk management formulas assume log-normal distributions but this paper lays out a compelling case for why power law distributions are often a better match.
  • A Brief History of Generative Models for Power Law and Lognormal Distributions Michael Mitzenmacher
    • This paper shows how log-normal and power-law distributions share many similarities.  The author suggests the difference between the two is that power-law distributions have a bounded minimum that acts as a reflective barrier (which is reminiscent of ergodic theory).
  • The normal distribution is the log-normal distribution by Werner Stahel & Eckhard Limpert
    • This presentation does a very nice job of distinguishing between the normal and log-normal distribution and providing guidelines for when they should be used. Bottom line, for stock price distributions we should use the log-normal distribution.

The VIX® and VIX Futures

  • Understanding VIX Futures and Options by Dennis Dzekounoff
    • This article is an excellent, non-mathematical overview of the peculiarities of VIX options including their Greeks and term structure.  Many brokers’ Greeks for VIX options use the VIX as their underlying, which is completely wrong, but Dennis points out some other issues like steep call skew, dangerous calendars, and slower than expected theta decay.
  • The official 30-day VIX methodology from the Cboe
    • Complete details on the VIX calculation, recently updated (2021) to reflect the new methodology that reduces the chances that bad quotes on the SPX options will glitch the VIX.
  • Cboe Volatility Index®Mathematics Methodology
    • This document, dated 2022 is intended to complement the VIX white papers.  It provides some information on how the interest rate calculations in the VIX are done that I have not seen anywhere else. 
  • The VIX-VIX Futures Puzzle?” by Ivan Oscar Asensio
    • A paper testing the forecast accuracy of VIX futures starts with a good non-mathematical overview before diving into a comprehensive technical overview of the VIX, VIX Futures, and volatility term structures.  It skips the calculus but provides a clear description and comprehensive formulas.
  • VIX Settlement Process by Dominic Salvino & William Speth
    • This presentation, included in a session from the Cboe’s 2014 European Risk Management Conference, provides a very good overview and some detailed examples of how the Cboe handles the controversial expiration process for VIX options and futures
  • A Tale of Two Indexes by Peter Carr and Liuren Wu
    • This paper briefly goes over the Cboe’s first try at a volatility index, now called the VXO but most of the paper is a mathematical tour de force taking us through the equations underlying the VIX, VIX Futures, and VIX options

Volatility Contagion—Will Short Volatility Destroy the World?

    I’ve listed three sources below with varied views on the odds of a volatility spike causing wide-spread damage to the world’s financial assets.

Variance Swaps—the Technology That Underlies the VIX

  • Just What You Need to Know about Variance Swaps by Sebastien Bossu, Eva Strasser, and Regis Guichard (JPMorgan) Downloads immediately. 
    • This technical paper includes a very good discussion and accompanying graphs regarding the “Static Replication of Variance Swap”—which happens to be underlying mechanism of the Cboe’s VIX. Technically the VIX is a variance swap priced in volatility points.
  • Variance and Convexity: A Practitioner’s Approach ” by Vishnu Kurella
    • My favorite paper from the CBOE’s 2013 Risk Management Conference.  Sparse and very technical it addresses some of the differences between variance and volatility with regards to VIX futures.
VIX + VIX Future Term Structure May 2011 – March 2012

First posted on

Click here to leave a comment

2 thoughts on “Volatility White Papers and Presentations”

  1. Hi Vance,

    Really enjoy your work. I have a question. I viewed a post from volatilitymadesimple.com a few years back that really resonated with me: http://volatilitymadesimple.com/four-graphs-to-rule-them-all/ This pulled together the relationship between the VIX index, VIX futures, historical volatility, and realized volatility. In your estimation, have the statistics shown in these graphs from 1986 to 2014 held up similarly from 2014 to present day? Thanks.

    Reply
    • Hi Tom, These relationships have held up reasonably well. There are structural/architectural reasons behind all of them. Historic volatility, the VIX, and VIX futures are all pretty different things so I don’t view them as somehow locked together. Historic volatility is often computed from a 20 day average so it tends to be overly influenced by older data points that are no longer relevant. The VIX calculation is heavily influenced by SPX puts that are way out of the money, this results in the VIX being quite sensitive to the market’s view of the probability of a correction. VIX futures are different in they are constructed as something called a forward forwards. They include a component that cancels out any theta decay while they are active. Just because there is a big difference between these metrics does not necessarily mean that you should try to profit off that premium. Often the market is appropriately pricing the premium, viewing it as insurance against market downturns.

      Vance

      Reply

Leave a Comment