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UVXY is a widow-maker of an ETF, down more than 99.9% over the past five years. A recent trebling in its share price is irrelevant to longer-term investors. UVXY is still a terrible product, sell it or short it. It’s going to drop further. Volatility ETFs are one of the worst inventions to hit retail investors in the past decade. These products that are literally designed to go to zero if you read the fine print in the prospectus. And yet thousands of small-time investors and speculators get sucked into them, thinking this is a good way to bet on, or even prudently hedge against volatile markets. The iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures ETF (NYSEARCA: VXX ) is still the gold standard for the space. And it’s a very lousy product. Short it or avoid it. However, with the dark magic that is a leveraged fund, you can take the inherent terribleness of VXX and cube it. Enter the ProShares Ultra Vix Short-Term Futures (NYSEARCA: UVXY ). The Velocity Shares Daily VIX 2x (NASDAQ: TVIX ) is basically the same functional product as UVXY in a slightly different wrapper and with less trading volume, but the same analysis applies. VXX, UVXY, TVIX and other such long volatility instruments are designed to benefit when the VIX rises. However, since VIX – somewhat inaccurately known as the “fear gauge” — is a mathematical construct rather than an actual investable instrument, no ETF tracks VIX properly. What you’re investing in when you buy VXX or UVXY isn’t the VIX you see scrolling across the CNBC ticker but rather a blended combination of futures contracts (derivatives) that aim to predict where VIX will be at a later date. There’s usually a large disconnect because VIX today and VIX in the future, leading to the returns on VXX and UVXY not coming close to what you’d expect just looking at spot VIX changes on the day. The general case against VXX and UVXY is rather simple. Volatility in the future is generally projected to be higher than volatility today. Since traders fear unknown future events more than the present knowable situation in most cases, traders will pay up more for protection farther into the future. Traders are usually more fearful of a crash farther along the horizon than in the short-term. Since VXX, UVXY and others own a mix of current month VIX futures and next month VIX futures, they tend to lose value when they have to rollover contracts. Say spot VIX as quoted on CNBC is 14, VIX futures for September are 16, and VIX for October is 18. Every day, VXX and UVXY have to sell some of their September contracts at 16 and buy Octobers at 18. They lose more than 10% of their net asset value (NAV) every month rolling over. Once October comes, October futures will be down to 16, Novembers at 18, and they’ll lose another 10% rolling again. VXX tends to lose about 70% of its value every year, and it’s largely driven by this effect. The long term impact of this effect, named contango, is most difficult. It’s why these funds always go down over the longer term, and why they make for poor investments. VXX is down from a peak of 7,000 (split-adjusted various times) in 2009 to 29 today. A drop of 99.6% since inception. UVXY’s done even worse, given the 2x leverage, falling from almost 500,000/share (yes, you read that right) to 64 just since 2011! (click to enlarge) Ouch! These are very-poor performing investments that most folks should steer clear of. However, now that the market is dropped and UVXY has tripled off the lows, everyone’s all excited about volatility products again. Now the talk of the town is that volatility is in “backwardation” meaning the usual value-destroying albatross that hits these investments is no longer in play. Backwardation, explained simply, is that now this month’s futures are worth more than next. If you can sell Septembers at 18 and buy Octobers at 16, your (NAV) rises 10% a month. If that state is maintained for awhile, particularly with UVXY’s leverage, you get some fat upside. And yes, that’s all true. But no, it doesn’t generally play out like that. Look at the long-term log chart of UVXY posted above. There were two periods of relatively long-lasting backwardation, during both the 2011 and 2012 market sell-offs. And UVXY and TVIX did indeed benefit from rising volatility and backwardation… however, the increases were very small compared to the larger downward trend. These instruments are so poorly constructed that brief periods of backwardation don’t move the needle. Backwardation almost never persists for a lengthy period of time because the market is almost always more fearful for the future than the present. Unless you’re actively seeing markets go through the floorboards right now, like during the recent Monday’s flash crash festivities, volatility expectations are almost always higher at a later date than what you see at present. While UVXY got to 90 during the current panic, it sold back off to 60 in just two days on a rather modest market recovery. And Tuesday, it dumped 19% again in a single day. Any instrument where you lose 33% of your money in two days or 19% overnight during a fairly routine market recovery is best avoided by most market participants. When you’re long UVXY, you are playing with fire. September VIX futures are currently at 26. Around 15 has been normal during this bull market. So just a reversion to normal wipes out more than a third of VXX’s value, and UVXY will suffer losses greater than that due to the leverage. The lottery ticket type upside in a crash scenario just isn’t worth the near certainty of an 50-75% loss in UVXY in coming weeks as the market and volatility stabilize. Even if you manage to time a sell-off correctly, you’re almost undoubtedly better off just buying puts on the market, through an ETF such as SPY. UVXY may go up 6x-8x if you hit a sell-off just right. Getting that, or a whole lot more, from SPY puts is no more difficult. In a perverse sort of way, it’s nice that these ETFs’ lives have dragged on as long as they have, as they are among the best short sales in the market. It will be a sad day when these sources of easy alpha are taken away from the short-selling arsenal. Disclosure: I am/we are short UVXY, VXX. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. Scalper1 News
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