Quote from trefoil:
So, as of right now (this is actually based on the S&P Vix Futures Index, which is calculated by doing this continuous roll) they are selling August and buying September, which they'll be doing until the 21st, at which point they start selling Sept and buying Oct.
Given the current term structure, it would be insane to put any money into this. Look instead at XIV: this has a long-term positive record, and is a much more sane investment at the moment. As long as the term structure is in contango and steeply sloped, it should do well. Look at http://www.cboe.com/micro/vxv/, the three month volatility index. If you download the spreadsheet there, you'll see that this closed at 18.55, 30% higher than the VIX. I figure, off the top of my head, that XIV will probably do well as long as VXV is at least 15% higher than the VIX. After that, better to sell it, most likely. I haven't backtested this at all, but given the historical data available here and if you got your hands on XIV's historical data, you could probably do a pretty good job of figuring out a decent strategy with these ETFs.
Bottom line, it's better to take the other side of the trade with these guys who suffer from the roll. When it goes into backwardation, you can do this UVXY or VXX, both of which would benefit.
You don't understand XIV.
XIV is designed to inverse track VXX *** INTRA-DAY ***...
That means from 9:30 to 16:00.
XIV does not track anything over the long term...
Because you have to rebalance DAILY to VXX....
And you are paying huge rebalancing costs...
Which is similar to paying 10%/month in VXX roll yield.
Both VXX and XIV are designed to go to zero...
The former due to roll yield... the latter due to rebalancing cost.
Going long either is sub-optimal... unless it's intra-day.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/306517-why-i-m-shorting-vxx-rather-than-buying-xiv