Quote from dancalio:
Please help me understand this.
Theoretically, VIX is supposed to reflect high volatility in both directions. But it seems that VIX only goes up mostly when there is fear of market drops, not when there is anticipation of large market rises.
What gives?
Thanks.
Ya gotcha theory, and then, ya gotcha fact. Congratulations on having noticed they're not the same.
In fact, whenever the market goes up, the VIX drops. When the market goes down, the VIX goes up. You can look at a one-minute chart, a daily chart, a weekly chart or a monthly chart and you will find that the negative correlation is almost perfect. Below is an example of a one-minute chart comparing the S&P 500 and the VIX.
Why is that? Because the VIX really charts complacency (low VIX) vs nervousness (higher VIX), not volatility. Puts, after all, are essentially insurance policies against a crash, so the VIX represents the price of crash insurance. Every time the market ticks down, nervousness goes up a little, and so does the VIX. Every time the market ticks up, nervousness goes down a little, and so does the VIX.
Why do I only mention puts and not calls? Because the stock market is different from other markets in that the vast majority of participants are long. The overall need for downside insurance is far greater than the need for upside insurance.
In commodities (crude for example), the market is two-sided - you have your shorts (consumers) and your longs (producers), so the need to hedge against crude going up is overall about equal to the need to hedge against crude going down.
Not so in stocks, where the overall concern about the market going down is far greater than the concern by those who would be hurt by the market going up.