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Money and Markets: Investing Insights

Limit Volatility or Use It for Profit – ETFs Help You Do Both!

Ron Rowland | Thursday, March 15, 2012 at 7:30 am

Ron Rowland

You’ve heard it before: “Stocks are just too volatile right now.”

So is volatility really a bad thing? And what the heck is volatility, anyway? We’ll talk about it today.

As you’ll see, volatility cuts both ways. Wise investors use it to their advantage. A new — and growing — category of ETFs and ETNs can help you tame the wild beast.

What Is Volatility?

If we made a list of the most misunderstood investment terms, “volatility” would be near the top. When the average investor is told something like “The stock market is volatile,” what he hears is typically “It’s going down!”

This is not correct. Look it up in your favorite dictionary. You’ll see that volatility is nothing more than another word for “variability” in an investment’s value.

A price can vary either up or down while staying equally “volatile.” Volatility simply means that an asset’s price is moving. The direction in which it oves is irrelevant.

Volatility goes both ways.
Volatility goes both ways.

That’s what the dictionary says. However, when investors say they want to avoid volatility what they usually mean is they want to avoid losses. In fact, most people love volatility as long as it works in their favor!

Now in real life it’s not so simple. We don’t know the future, so we don’t know how volatile an investment will be. At best we can make an educated guess based on past events.

Volatility in a Bottle

Your guess about volatility, while it is only a guess, does matter. If you own an asset that has a history of suddenly jumping in value, someone who thinks another such jump is imminent may be willing to pay you a higher price.

Professionals watch volatility — and use it to  their advantage.
Professionals watch volatility — and use it to their advantage.

For this reason, professional traders pay a lot of attention to historical volatility. They track it with computer models and compile the results into indexes.

In the last few years, some of these volatility instruments have been packaged into exchange-traded funds and exchange-traded notes. My latest count shows around 30 volatility-based ETFs and ETNs are now available to U.S. investors.

Are any of them right for you? Maybe, maybe not — but they can still be useful. Just watching their activity can help your investment strategy. Here are a few you may want to put on your radar screen:

  • iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term ETN (VXX)

  • iPath S&P 500 VIX Mid-Term ETN (VXZ)

  • ProShares VIX Short-Term Futures ETF (VIXY)

  • ProShares VIX Mid-Term Futures ETF (VIXM)

While VXX and VXZ have more history, I’m wary of their exchange-traded note structure. The ProShares offerings are very similar but do not expose investors to issuer credit risk.

How would you use these?

All four are based on derivatives of the S&P 500 Volatility Index — the “VIX” in Wall Street lingo. When markets get crazy, the VIX tends to spike higher. Ideally you would want to buy volatility before the craziness hits. Easier said than done, I know, but these products make it easy to try your luck.

Want to Limit Volatility?
ETFs Can Help You There, Too!

Suppose you’ve analyzed your investment goals along with your personality. You know you need to be in stocks, but you also admit you may get cold feet.

Sometimes you might want an easier ride.
Sometimes you might want an easier ride.

In other words, you want some volatility but not too much. Can you participate in stocks without the full-scale roller coaster ride?

Yes, you can, with a new breed of volatility-controlled ETFs and ETNs. Direxion, for instance, just launched three “volatility response” ETFs. They try to target a specific risk level (15 percent annualized standard deviation, to be specific) by adjusting the split between stocks and fixed-income assets.

You can pick from two U.S. equity indexes or a Latin America index:

  • Direxion S&P 1500 Volatility Response Shares (VSPR)

  • Direxion S&P 500 Volatility Response Shares (VSPY)

  • Direxion S&P Latin America 40 Volatility Response Shares (VLAT)
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Barclays has an ETN with similar objectives, but it tries to reduce volatility by moving partly into VIX futures rather than cash-like instruments. It is called the Barclays ETN+ S&P VEQTOR ETN (VQT).

As you can see, the ETF industry is drilling deeper and deeper into the specialized areas once available only to sophisticated institutional investors. Whether you want to trade volatility or not, it’s exciting to watch this phenomenal change. Keep your eyes open for more!

Best wishes,

Ron

P.S. I recently helped my International ETF Trader members bag a double-digit gain on a Thailand ETF … after less than three months! If you’d like in on my next reco, click here.

Ron Rowland is widely regarded as a leading ETF and mutual fund advisor. You may have read about Mr. Rowland and his strategies in publications such as The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Investor's Business Daily, Forbes.com, Barron's, Hulbert Financial Digest and many more. As a former mutual fund manager from 2000 to 2002, Ron was a pioneer in using ETFs inside of mutual funds. Today, he is the editor of International ETF Trader, dedicated to helping investors use ETFs to profit from ever-changing global market conditions.

{ 4 comments }

Tom Hogshead PhD Thursday, March 15, 2012 at 7:54 am

If you decide to use VXX as a volatility hedge, you may want to first check out Charts 4, 5 and 6 at

https://sites.google.com/site/volatilityresearch/correlation-vxx-vs-xiv-2011

These charts suggest that VXX was not a good volatility hedge over 2011.

Dr. Montiglione Thursday, March 15, 2012 at 10:46 am

Boy, all this is not quite the same as buying and holding Proctor and Gamble for years, is it?

Lenka Ivanovich Tuesday, March 20, 2012 at 10:58 am

I think that the price of bars tools in public establishments in southern Turkey will rise. Does Barkleys or Proshares make an ETF for that?

Lenka Ivanovich Tuesday, March 20, 2012 at 10:59 am

Sorry. Can’t spell. Meant to say “bar stools.”

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