Bill at VIX and More has a more intelligent analysis of the low VIX than that which we heard on TV.
* Focus on the relative values of the VIX (i.e., with respect to a recent trading range) instead of absolute values
* Consider the cash VIX in the context of expectations for future volatility
* The more extreme readings give more reliable signals
* History favors mean reversion for the VIX
* Mean reversion does not always happen quickly, so scale in to a position
* If you follow good risk control, VIX signals are one of the few ones for which it is acceptable to add to losing positions (assuming the mean reversion signal is still valid)
* Be sure to start taking profits in no less than 1-2 weeks
Soâ¦that is my thinking. A sub-20 VIX? Not really relevant. A VIX more than 10% below the 10 day SMA? Generally tradeable. A better signal? While it is still too early âcling tightlyâ to the VXV (an index that calculates the 93 day implied volatility for the SPX options), I am bullish on the VIX:VXV ratio â and the chart of that ratio suggests that the market is approaching an overbought condition.
http://adamsoptions.blogspot.com/2008/04/never-trust-vix-under-20.html
* Focus on the relative values of the VIX (i.e., with respect to a recent trading range) instead of absolute values
* Consider the cash VIX in the context of expectations for future volatility
* The more extreme readings give more reliable signals
* History favors mean reversion for the VIX
* Mean reversion does not always happen quickly, so scale in to a position
* If you follow good risk control, VIX signals are one of the few ones for which it is acceptable to add to losing positions (assuming the mean reversion signal is still valid)
* Be sure to start taking profits in no less than 1-2 weeks
Soâ¦that is my thinking. A sub-20 VIX? Not really relevant. A VIX more than 10% below the 10 day SMA? Generally tradeable. A better signal? While it is still too early âcling tightlyâ to the VXV (an index that calculates the 93 day implied volatility for the SPX options), I am bullish on the VIX:VXV ratio â and the chart of that ratio suggests that the market is approaching an overbought condition.
http://adamsoptions.blogspot.com/2008/04/never-trust-vix-under-20.html