Quote from xburbx:
If you are talking about the reverse engineering the perfect trade conversation, I would look at the price, conditions and characteristics of VIX for one of those trades.
Quote from achilles28:
Okay.... So how would you apply that to your strategy, given our previous conversation?
Quote from achilles28:
Okay. So how would that look? You mentioned rangy days are better for you? And trendy, not so much? What does the VIX look like on rangy days? How would you apply it?
Quote from rossky:
When we see wide moves in both directions, it probably means it has been a period of higher than average levels of uncertainty. And, when the market is trending the volatility is lower because the participants feel more confident about the direction.
I hear that volatility tends to cluster. I'm not sure if I interpret it correctly. It looks like if we are witnessing something happening then it probably last for a while, but we can never be sure for how long it's going to last.
Patiently wait for the right conditions to trade?
Quote from xburbx:
I'm the guy that looks for trend days and I think it was rocky that wants range days. Regardless to answer your question, my knowledge of vix is that over a certain number on it tends to be considered high volatility. I am not sure about it's actual intraday price structure. I don't know if just simply being over x number would create the right conditions or if it needs to be in an uptrend. That I will have to investigate.






Quote from macattack:
Has anyone correctly answered the question in the title of this thread yet?
"Why Is The Obvious Not So Obvious?
Just wondering.
What exactly is the question about anyway?
Why is "what obvious" not "obvious"?
Obvious which way price is moving?
Obvious how much to bet?
Obvious how to win?
Obvious why the game is so hard for so many?
What are we talking about here?
I just went outside & it's obvious that it's sunny; it's also obvious my co-worker drank too much last night, so the obvious is obvious sometimes.
Quote from achilles28:
Yes, and tying volatility to underlying fundamental drivers is correct. I would caution and say that trending environments can - and often - do occur in a high VIX environment. 2008. This past August. Volatility clusters because it's largely news-driven. Crisis don't manifest or resolve themselves overnight. When the market finally sits up and takes notice, politicians and CB'ers must act. Given the plodding nature of humans and bureaucracy, solutions take time. This is why volatility tends to "cluster", or continue.
As for the VIX... Is there a correlation between it and your trading performance? For example, during low-VIX periods, is your trading a net loss? And when the VIX is high, it's a net gain?


