I gave a talk at an investment seminar recently which was titled “Investing Myths: De-bunking Widely Accepted Truisms”.
I gave a talk at an investment seminar recently which was titled “Investing Myths: De-bunking Widely Accepted Truisms”.
I gave a talk at an investment seminar recently which was titled “Investing Myths: De-bunking Widely Accepted Truisms”.
Investment management is full of beliefs that at first glance seem to make perfect sense, and are often used as justification for investment decisions. The problem is that most of these beliefs are simply wrong, and result in investment recommendations that are based on wrong deductions. These recommendations usually end up losing money. A famous quote sums this up perfectly: It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.
Last year in my mid-year article we analysed how ‘Selling in May and Going Away’ was a money losing strategy. This time we tackle another money losing idea that has been making the rounds as advice recently: the idea that a low Volatility Index (VIX) means that investors are complacent, and that an equity bear market like 2008 is just around the corner. This conclusion is based on the single observation about the last time the VIX touched 10, in early 2007, which was soon followed by the Great Financial Crisis of 2008. You do not need a degree in statistics to know that a sample of one hardly makes for a good observation on which to base any investment decision.
This 2007-2008 observation of the VIX, coupled with other crystal ball gazing remarks such as we get a massive bear market every 10 years (1987 US stock market crash, 1997-98 Asian crisis, 2007-08 GFC) has caused many jittery investors to sell down equity holdings, or even worse buy the VIX ETF to profit from an impending market crash. The fact that global equity valuations, especially in the US, are high lends further ammunition to the bears’ argument.
Unfortunately bear markets do not follow such an arbitrary time-table. A closer look at the facts exposes the flawed thinking in concluding that a VIX of 10 is a trigger to sell equities. Since the VIX is the implied volatility of the S&P500 index, all we need to do is look at how the S&P500 performs when the VIX is low. The results may be surprising to all the speculators who believed that a low VIX implies complacency and too much investor bullishness.
Interestingly, the above analysis of the S&P500 and the VIX over the last two decades does lead to a profitable investment signal. Buying the S&P500 when the VIX is above 28.50 leads to significant profits, as the market gains 42.6% per annum when the VIX is elevated above this level. The risk is that in the short term the VIX can zoom past 28.50 and go much higher, leading to losses in the short term. This however is a profitable and proven trading strategy that is far better than selling when the VIX is at 10.
A significant pullback in equities is always a risk and long-term investors need to accept the resulting volatility. Rather than trying to anticipate the next downturn and selling ahead of it, running the risk of missing out on more upside, a better strategy is to use the VIX as a signal on when to add equities instead.
Many investing recommendations are made on wrong deductions that are easily exposed by analysing the facts. There are much better market indicators to use to gauge a market top; a low VIX is not one of them.
By LEONARDO DRAGO
Co-founder of AL Wealth Partners, an independent Singapore-based company providing investment and fund management services to endowments and family offices, and wealth-advisory services to accredited individual investors.