Volatility forecasting

When I look at that stuff, my eyes glaze over then I nod off! Above my pay-grade as well.
However, it seems some of us lay-people may fairly safely trade volatility by just looking in the rear-view mirror after big events! (regression to the mean, works better when you trail an extreme). -- Has nothing to do with predicting when a new volatility increase will occur, however.
 
When I look at that stuff, my eyes glaze over then I nod off! Above my pay-grade as well.
However, it seems some of us lay-people may fairly safely trade volatility by just looking in the rear-view mirror after big events! (regression to the mean, works better when you trail an extreme). -- Has nothing to do with predicting when a new volatility increase will occur, however.
I love that rhyme, "regression to the mean, works better when you trail an extreme." Based on my observations, that works better after a scheduled event like earnings. If the earnings announcement occurs, implied vol drops and stat vol increases for a while and then decays. However, with indexes, a high implied vol could last for a longer period of time and it is hard to predict with any certainty the end of the event. Anybody have any thoughts?
 
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