Quote from sle:
This has nothing to do with upside or downside, it has to do with risk premium. If the implied vol for a single stock is realising break-even in a low-vol (normal) environment, it's a free option in a blow-up environment. So, any implied vol would be a combination of "actuarial" volatility and "beta" volatility. While the actual value of that market (beta) component of vol is not clear, an option that is only pricing idiosyncratic volatility is a great buy. Think of it, for a sec, as a "selective" dispersion play vs index vol - it will all make sense.
Sorry, I should have been more clear. I didn't mean the term upside and downside in terms of direction, I meant upside as in higher vol, i.e. like the dispersion you mentioned. Buying gamma in the individual components of an index and selling the gamma of the index itself. I think we are on the same page there. Although when you say you are getting it for free, I think that's not exactly right. Everything has a cost, even it's opportunity cost or time cost. For an example there are free arbitrage plays out there, I know I use to do them. However, technically they were never free. We locked up capital for months on end to realize it. When in the meantime that capital could have been deployed to strategies that earned a far greater return. This is always the problem of being long convexity that is so called cheap. Sure you are getting the upside but when? Now if you are telling me you or your firm have found the secret to not only buying cheap convexity but also timing it perfectly then I would love to invest my money in that fund. I'm still looking for it. LOL.
This is a bit beyond the scope of this thread, but I don't think you undestand the business model of either large funds or banks well enough to make these statements. I will expand on that after the close, gotta go do work.
I would love to here you defend it. Not attacking you personally or the firm you represent, but as someone who has been a prop trader for over a decade and lived in NY and had pretty much my entire social network in the banking industry, while I don't pretend to be able to write a graphic novel on the business, I know enough about the business to know that most large banks are in the business of selling synthetic risk. Unless you are going to give me an entirely different version of the mortgage blowup in 2008 that has been written in over 100 or 1000 books by now. I would love to hear your version of why banks were selling CDS for 2% on junk that had absolutely ZERO value but kept selling it with impunity to people like Michael Bury. Don't get me wrong, I'm very interested in the discussion. I'll buy into the idea that maybe I'm not getting the whole story. If you can fill in missing pieces that would be great.