Fearless Stock Bulls Start Hedging as Fed Policy Pivot Stalls

​The demand for broad market insurance plunged to multi-year lows in the first quarter as US stocks posted a series of fresh highs despite growing geopolitical tensions and uncertainty over interest rates.

A bumpy week for the S&P 500 prompted long-complacent traders to look at the hedges they’ve ignored for months.

The demand for broad market insurance plunged to multi-year lows in the first quarter as US stocks posted a series of fresh highs despite growing geopolitical tensions and uncertainty over interest rates. This week, that changed as the desire to protect against a downturn increased by a number of measures.

“People are starting to recognize that we’ve skated through these first three months of the year — all in the face of interest rates going up, in the face of pushing out the probabilities of cuts,” said Joe Mazzola, director of trading and education at Charles Schwab & Co. “Something’s got to give at some point.”

The Cboe Volatility Index, known as the VIX, closed at its highest level since November on Thursday, before dipping Friday as US stocks climbed. The index — a measure of the 30-day implied volatility of the S&P 500 based on out-of-the-money options prices — still held above its 200-day moving average.
VIX trading1Agencies

Since late March, investors have been slowly tacking on hedges, pushing the cost of bearish three-month options to the biggest premium over bullish contracts since mid-January. Those positions added onto insurance that’s gotten more attention this year — tail-risk hedges that protect against a major crash, rather than a minor correction.
VIX trading2Agencies

Some investors are using spreads, which offer less protection against a downturn but cost much less than outright contracts. Susquehanna International Group called out recent put spreads that ready for drawdowns in the S&P 500, the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100, and the Russell 2000 — often seen as a benchmark of small cap health.

Belmont Capital Group’s Stephen Solaka, who manages hedging strategies for wealth management firms and institutions, said that more clients have been asking for portfolio hedges tied to both equities benchmarks as well as individual tech firms.

“That’s a function of pricing and the run-up that we’ve had,” he said. According to Solaka, the demand makes sense: after the S&P 500’s blistering rally, investors might want to shield their winnings. “It’s natural.”

These days, trader angst centers on a bunch of unknowns: geopolitical tensions, the upcoming US presidential election, first-quarter earnings reports, and — of course — central policy. That final wildcard came to the forefront last week after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said bankers need not rush to ease borrowing. The Fed’s Neel Kashkari further soured the mood when he raised the possibility of no rate cuts in 2024.

A spike in put volume tied to iShares iBoxx High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (ticker HYG) signaled that investors are preparing for the Fed to disappoint again. The hedges tied to the fund would likely pay off should the Fed’s tight policy push the rate-sensitive fund lower.
VIX trading3Agencies

“If you think about what’s been driving some of the real macro volatility, it has been interest rates,” said Alex Kosoglyadov, managing director of derivatives at Nomura Securities International, noting that fewer cuts than markets expect could catalyze stock moves. “The Fed is a risk that could take the market lower.”

Options positioning mirrors the action in the equity market, which has favored established megacaps over riskier stocks. Growth and quality exchange-traded funds reaped massive inflows compared to value funds’ meager intake throughout March.

Demand for protection boils down to trader expectations, according to Rohan Reddy, director of research at Global X Management. With mounting consensus for a soft landing, unwelcome surprises can beget a bit of angst in even the most fearless of bull markets.

“There is, of course, a real possibility things could get bumpy, in which case there may be more desire to protect,” said Reddy.

Source: Stocks-Markets-Economic Times

Publicații recente
Manufacturing and services PMIs headline Monday's economic calendar
20.09.2024 - 22:00
US nuclear regulator has not gotten application for Three Mile Island restart
20.09.2024 - 22:00
Calamos VP John Koudounis sells shares worth over $380k
20.09.2024 - 22:00
Biden readies $375 million arms aid package for Ukraine
20.09.2024 - 22:00
Nike, AAR Corp set to report earnings Monday
20.09.2024 - 22:00
SEC rules Fox can skip vote on labeling TV opinion shows
20.09.2024 - 22:00
Challenge to US drug price negotiation program revived by appeals court
20.09.2024 - 22:00
US stocks mixed as investors weigh FedEx slump, Fed outlook
20.09.2024 - 21:00
Kayne Anderson BDC director Schnabel buys $7.6k in shares
20.09.2024 - 21:00
US FDA approves AstraZeneca's self-administered nasal spray flu vaccine
20.09.2024 - 21:00
Murdoch-backed REA sweetens offer for UK's Rightmove to nearly $7.9 billion, FT reports
20.09.2024 - 21:00
US Fed's relaxed bank capital plan faces pushback from regulator, sources say
20.09.2024 - 21:00
US House votes to repeal Biden administration tailpipe emissions rules
20.09.2024 - 21:00
CAMP4 Therapeutics Files for Proposed IPO
20.09.2024 - 21:00
Germany to hold onto Commerzbank stake as lender aims for independence
20.09.2024 - 21:00

© Analytic DC. All Rights Reserved.

new
Analiza pieței Analiza complexǎ a petrolului WTI
Bine ați venit în mesageria de suport!!
*
*

Solicitarea dvs. a fost trimisă cu succes!
Veți fi contactat în scurt timp.