Volatility Collapse Fuels Rally as Market Leadership Narrows
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Today felt pretty boring to me. I honestly didn’t pay much attention. For whatever reason, the 1-day VIX settled at 17.6 on Friday and then opened around 12 today. That collapse in implied volatility was the boost the market needed to get the indexes moving higher. Aside from a brief pullback early in the session, when the indexes gave back their initial gains, the rest of the day looked like steady volatility selling.
With Kevin Warsh speaking on Wednesday morning and the June jobs report due on Thursday, I would expect implied volatility to move sharply higher into both events. If that happens, it will probably be difficult for the market to sustain the momentum from today’s rally.
Meanwhile, as index implied volatility fell, single-stock implied volatility rose, with the VIXEQ climbing to 47.5 while the VIX Index declined to 17.6. That divergence pushed dispersion higher on the day and implied correlation lower. At 44.13, the Dispersion Index is already elevated. In recent years, it has only been higher during the COVID crash and the Tariff Tantrum.
It tells us a great deal about the current state of the market. With equity indexes pushing higher, single-stock implied volatility rising, and dispersion continuing to climb, investors appear to be chasing an increasingly narrow group of stocks. That combination suggests the market has become increasingly frothy, with momentum rather than broad participation driving gains.
In the meantime, I thought it was a really boring day, but with JOLTS tomorrow and a slew of data coming between now and the Jobs report on Thursday. I’m expecting the rate discussion will heat up again.
-Mike
Glossary by ChatGPT
Dispersion — The degree to which individual stock returns or implied volatilities differ from one another within an index.
Dispersion Index — A measure tracking the gap between index implied volatility and single-stock implied volatility, often used to gauge market concentration and stock-specific risk.
Implied Correlation — The market’s expected average correlation among stocks within an index, derived from options prices.
Implied Volatility — The market’s expectation of future price movement derived from option prices.
JOLTS — The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, a monthly report measuring labor demand and workforce turnover.
Momentum — An investment characteristic where assets that have recently outperformed tend to continue outperforming over the near term.
VIX — The CBOE Volatility Index, which measures the market’s expectation of 30-day volatility for the S&P 500 based on options prices.
VIXEQ — The CBOE S&P 500 Equal Weight Volatility Index, which reflects implied volatility across equally weighted S&P 500 constituents rather than the capitalization-weighted index.
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