Here's the funny thing. Plot VIX on a chart. Then also lay a plot of a contrafund of the broader market, like TZA or SDS on the same graph. You'll see that VIX goes up when the market goes down. Like clockwork. I tried to make money on the differential, but it happens so quick I couldn't do it. My point is that (to me) the VIX is just a fancy way of measuring when the market goes down. It's so correlated to the opposite of market direction that it's almost indistinguishable. So an article that says "the market is going to turn up soon because the VIX is up" is saying the same thing as "the market is going to turn up soon because it is down". Stupid.
You are incorrect my friend. Depending on the time frame you use, the VIX is only about 81% inversely correlated to the S&P, so very far from indistinguishable.
And since the VIX is not an index, it's simply a snapshot statistic in time of the options activity on the S&P 500, of F'ing course you can't use it to capture the difference or predict the market.
Don't you know the difference yet between correlation and causation?
You're criticizing people who misunderstand what the VIX is, all the while you yourself don't seem to have any idea what the VIX is. Not for nothing, but blind leading the blind anyone?
