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Business Markets

Hedge funds are shorting the VIX at a rate never seen before

Large speculators were net short about 178,000 VIX futures contracts on April 23



New York. As equities surge to all-time highs, volatility has all but vanished. Hedge funds are betting the calm will last, shorting the Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, at rates not seen in at least 15 years.

Large speculators, mostly hedge funds, were net short about 178,000 VIX futures contracts on April 23, the largest such position on record, weekly CFTC data that dates back to 2004 show.

Commonly known as the stock market fear gauge, aggressive bets against the VIX are, depending on your worldview, evidence of either confidence or complacency.

Strategists lately have been pushing back on the idea that a lot of useful information is visible in VIX positioning data.

CFTC data doesn’t take into account positioning seen in exchange-traded-products — which is notably long volatility — or the type of traders who hold a mix of both long and shorts as a hedge or relative value strategy.

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The VIX rose last week, but still remains below 13 — more than 30 per cent below the gauge’s average over the last 20 years. While the VIX inched higher, so too did stocks, the S&P 500 rising to a new record.

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