Eurex Volatility Futures
Eurex Volatility Futures
Eurex Volatility Futures
Axel Vischer
Agenda
n
Trading Volatility: Available Instruments and Concepts Volatility Futures: Trading Volatility made easy Basics on Futures Pricing Applications
Realized Volatility
Also referred to as historical volatility Based on historical market data, e.g. prices observed in the past Standard deviation of a stocks or indexs returns over the last N days Return: natural logarithm of close-to-close price observations
Implied Volatility
Implied by observed option prices Iterative numerical procedure needed to extract implied volatility out of option prices Forward looking: markets opinion about the expected volatility of the stock or index
2004
2005
Volatility Swaps Contract on forward realized volatility Payoff = Notional * ( realized volatility volatility strike ) = N * (v-Dvol) Variance Swaps Contract on forward realized variance Payoff = Notional * ( realized volatility2 variance strike ) = N * (2v-Dvar) = is the actual volatility of an index over the life of the contract, = the volatility specified by the swap, = the notional amount of the swap (in dollar, euro, etc.) per a unit of volatility.
where: v Dvol N
The fair value of a Volatility / Variance swap is the volatility/variance strike that makes the swap have zero value at inception.
Volatility Swap - Linear Payoff - Gain for swap owner from 20% volatility increase ~ Loss from 20% decrease - Dynamic hedge - Market Volume pretty small
Variance Swap - Non-linear Payoff - Gain for swap owner from 20% volatility increase > Loss from 20% decrease - Static hedge - estim. Market vol. in Europe > 80 bn EUR p.a. 6
Hedging
Static Hedge:
Hedge is implemented in an initial transaction No more adjustments necessary afterwards Hedged position is insensitive to market changes Preferred procedure for all hedgers
Dynamic Hedge:
Hedge is implemented in an initial transaction Frequent adjustments necessary afterwards Hedged position is sensitive to market changes Frequency of readjustments can be regular or irregular, but generally driven by market changes The more readjustments the hedger has to perform during the life-time of the hedged position, the more expensive and inconvenient the dynamic hedging procedure is
Agenda
n
Trading Volatility: Available Instruments and Concepts Volatility Futures: Trading Volatility made easy Basics on Futures Pricing Applications
Index Design
n n
n n n n
Methodology established: VDAX, VXO (old VIX) Calculation method complicated (implied volatilities necessary) Based upon a limited number of near ATM option prices Derivative would need to be hedged dynamically In terms of hedging worst case scenario OTC Swap Market negligible
Implied Variance
n n n n n
Stable and straightforward formula for evaluation using option prices directly not implied volatilities More representative (using a strip of options) Static hedge possible Swap market well established Is NOT and does NOT look like volatility.
n n n n
Stable and straightforward formula for evaluation using options directly not implied volatilities More representative (using a strip of options) Can only be hedged dynamically Is closely related to implied volatility but not identical. The information about the full skew is contained in the strips of options. 10
Evaluation of Sub-index per option expiry based on the square-root of implied variance
100 times the square root of 2 The first 8 expirations are covered by sub-indices
Construction of rolling index at 30 days to expiration through linear interpolation of the two nearest sub-indices Index formula represents the fair strike for a variance swap to a given expiry.
K 2 1 F = 2j R M ( K j ) 1 T j Kj T K 0
2 2
11
Volatility Levels %
15 25 35 45 55 65 75
03.01.2000 03.04.2000 03.07.2000 03.10.2000 03.01.2001 03.04.2001 03.07.2001 03.10.2001 03.01.2002 03.04.2002 03.07.2002 03.10.2002 03.01.2003 03.04.2003 03.07.2003 03.10.2003 03.01.2004 03.04.2004 03.07.2004 03.10.2004 03.01.2005 03.04.2005 03.07.2005 03.10.2005 03.01.2006
12
Underlying: Volatility Index VSTOXX (for FVSX), VDAX-NEW (for FVDX) and VSMI (for FVSM) Contract Value: EUR1000 per index point (FVSX, FVDX), CHF 1000 per index point (FVSM) The vega of the contract Minimum Price Movement: 0.05 of a point, equivalent to a value of EUR 50 and CHF 50 respectively Typical minimum tick size in variance swap market is 0.10 points Last Trading Day: The Wednesday prior to the second last Friday of the expiring month (exactly 30 days before the next index option expiry, no index interpolation necessary) Contract Months: The three nearest calendar months and the next quarterly month of the February, May, August, and November cycle Daily Settlement: The closing price determined within the closing auction; If no price can be determined in the closing auction or if the price so determined does not reasonably reflect current market conditions, daily settlement price will be the last traded price within the last 15 minutes of Continuous Trading. If the last traded price is older than 15 minutes or does not reasonably reflect current market conditions, Eurex will establish the official settlement price. Final Settlement: Cash settled Final Settlement Price: Average over the index ticks of the last 30 minutes before expiration (FVSX: 11:30-12:00 CET, FVDX: 12:30-13:00 CET). Exception for FVSM, average over last 60 minutes: 9:00-10:00 CET. Trading hours: 09:00 a.m. until 17:30 p.m. CET
n n
13
Minimum contract Size: Maximum Spread: Required Coverage: Expiry Range: Incentive:
10 contracts 10% of bid price, i.e. Future bid = 17%, spread 1.7 points 85 percent of the total trading period on a monthly average All 4 available expirations have to be covered 100%-fee rebate until 31st of March, 2007, for fulfilling the monthly obligations Merrill Lynch Optiver Currently all maturities are quoted with spreads of around 0.5 volatility point
n n n
Typical Spreads:
14
Agenda
n
Trading Volatility: Available Instruments and Concepts Volatility Futures: Trading Volatility made easy Basics on Futures Pricing Applications
15
18
16
14
12
16
Variance is additive:
Mathematically, due to the so-called convexity bias, this approach gives us an upper bound for the fair value One can show that a corresponding lower bound can be calculated by the forward vola swap rate
Lower bound
Fair Value
Upper bound
18.88
31 d.
16.50
59 d.
16.63
150 d.
17.17
interpolated Subindices
1 d.
19.05
29 d.
16.67
64 d.
16.66
120 d.
16.99
30.d
16.41
30.d
Upper bounds
16.59
30.d
(~ 16.9)
30.d
17.88 17.Mar 18
16.Nov
18.Nov
16.Dec
21.Dec
15.Feb
20.Jan
17.Oct
19.Oct
21.Oct
19
12
14
16
18
20
.0 9 20 .20 . 0 05 9 21 . 20 .0 05 9 22 .20 .0 05 9 23 .20 . 0 05 9 24 . 20 .0 05 9 25 .20 .0 05 9 26 .20 . 0 05 9 27 . 20 .0 05 9 28 .20 .0 05 9 29 .20 . 0 05 9 30 . 20 .0 05 9 01 .20 .1 05 0 02 .20 . 1 05 0 03 . 20 .1 05 0 04 .20 .1 05 0 05 .20 . 1 05 0 06 . 20 .1 05 0 07 .20 .1 05 0 08 .20 . 1 05 0 09 . 20 .1 05 0 10 .20 .1 05 0 11 .20 . 1 05 0 12 . 20 .1 05 0 13 .20 .1 05 0 14 . 20 . 1 05 0 15 . 20 .1 05 0 16 .20 .1 05 0 17 .20 . 1 05 0 18 . 20 .1 05 0 19 .20 .1 05 0 20 .20 . 1 05 0 21 . 20 .1 05 0. 20 05
19
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
20
FV2 FV4
FV1
.0 9. 2 .0 005 9 21 .20 .0 05 9. 22 20 . 0 05 9 23 . 20 . 0 05 9 24 . 20 .0 05 9 25 .20 .0 05 9 26 .20 . 0 05 9 27 . 20 . 0 05 9 28 . 20 .0 05 9 29 .20 .0 05 9 30 .20 .0 05 9 01 .20 . 1 05 0 02 . 20 .1 05 0 03 .20 .1 05 0 04 .20 .1 05 0 05 . 20 . 1 05 0 06 . 20 .1 05 0 07 .20 .1 05 0 08 .20 .1 05 0 09 . 20 . 1 05 0 10 . 20 .1 05 0 11 .20 .1 05 0. 12 20 . 1 05 0 13 . 20 . 1 05 0 14 . 20 . 1 05 0 15 .20 .1 05 0 16 .20 .1 05 0 17 .20 . 1 05 0 18 . 20 .1 05 0 19 .20 .1 05 0 20 .20 .1 05 0 21 .20 . 1 05 0. 20 05
19
Price Comparison
FVSX FVDX FVSM
Compare Vegas for a 1% Volatility change between volatility futures and their underlying index options
Measure about how much cheaper the new volatility futures are to build up pure vega positions
VSTOXX future
A 1% volatility increase/decrease changes the contract value by +/- 1000 EUR (vega)
About at least 10 ATM EURO STOXX 50 Index options are needed to provide the same vega as the VSTOXX future
VSTOXX contract fee: 0.5 EUR Euro Stoxx 50 index options contract fees: A- account (customer): 0.3 EURreplication cost: 3 EUR
20
Risk Management
n n n
Only vega exposure (sensitivity to volatility), no delta exposure (sensitivity to underlying cash index) Vega exposure is constant over time
Vega of a variance swap declines linearly over time and is zero at settlement of the contract
17
Frequency
12
7
VAR
2
-25 -23 -21 -19 -17 -15 -13 -11 -9 -7 -5 -3 -1 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29
-3 Return in %
21
Hedge Ratio
n
n n n
The VSTOXX future delivers a 1000 Euro Vega exposure Hedge Ratio VSTOXX vs. EuroStoxx
1 Mio. Euro / 2.6 / 1000 Euro = 385 Futures
VST O XX Re tu rn in % 50 40 30 20 10 0 -10 -20 -30 -40 -50 -15
based on weekly returns 2000-2005
-10
-5
10
15
22
Agenda
n
Trading Volatility: Available Instruments and Concepts Volatility Futures: Trading Volatility made easy Basics on Futures Pricing Applications
23
equity market exposure: crash risk: correlation exposure: credit spread exposure:
Hedging
- volatility rises significantly and rapidly in a crash scenario. - e.g. stock-picking becomes harder in a high correlation environment. - volatility and credit spreads are linked.
Spread Trading
n Trading n Trading
- e.g. Volatility spread between US (VIX) and Europe (VSTOXX) - Trading on changes in the volatility term strucuture
24
- volatility can improve the risk and return characteristics of a balanced portfolio.
n Tactical n Take
- e.g. volatility can be a key input and risk in the asset allocation process.
- e.g. volatility tends to be mean-reverting, speculators can take advantage of this characteristic.
Arbitrage
n Volatility
arbitrage:
- trade implied versus realized volatility - trade Volatility futures against a delta-neutral portfolio of options
25
Further Information
n
26