Volatility Quant Soars 64% as Fear Goes Missing on Wall Street

HFA Padded
Advisor Perspectives
Published on
Updated on

A New York money manager has netted a 64% gain from a strategy riding the big plunge in volatility across the stock market in this expectations-busting year on Wall Street.

With the Cboe Volatility Index falling to post-pandemic lows in the great 2023 risk revival, the ABR Enhanced Short Volatility Fund has made outsize gains thanks to a simple systematic approach that includes shorting futures on this so-called fear gauge. That’s proved a slam-dunk trade given price swings on equity benchmarks have stayed curiously low, including during Federal Reserve-related bouts of market panic.

A quarter of ABR Dynamic Funds LLC’s $500 million assets under management are concentrated in trades that wager on market calm. Money managers with specialized short-volatility strategies are a rarer sight these days after a cull induced by the virus-spurred market rout in 2020 and 2018’s “Volmageddon” episode.

“It’s time that people start learning that short volatility is a wonderful partial equity replacement,” said Taylor Lukof, who founded the money manager in 2010.

The Enhanced Short Volatility Fund which tracks the broader strategy ranks at the top of more than 500 alternative funds tracked by Kepler Partners this year.

ABR Enhanced Short Volatility Fund

The firm surfs asset trends using quantitative methods and dynamically reduces and increases volatility bets. When there’s a period of market turmoil, ABR’s short-volatility strategies move into cash and long-dated US Treasuries to limit losses.

Short-volatility strategies often take the form of selling a put on a stock or index while investing in a risk-free asset like Treasuries. They typically ride bullish market sentiment, like the 23% advance in the S&P 500 this year, but backfire when a rapid selloff ignites volatility.

This year, betting against equity price swings hardly seemed like a surefire bet in the grip of the most aggressive interest-rate hikes in a generation, a steady erosion of corporate profits and the failure of regional banks. Yet for all that, the VIX has still tumbled to near four-year lows.

Read the full article here by Denitsa Tsekova of Bloomberg News – Advisor Perspectives

HFA Padded

The Advisory Profession’s Best Web Sites by Bob Veres His firm has created more than 2,000 websites for financial advisors. Bart Wisniowski, founder and CEO of Advisor Websites, has the best seat in the house to watch the rapidly evolving state-of-the-art in website design and feature sets in this age of social media, video blogs and smartphones. In a recent interview, Wisniowski not only talked about the latest developments and trends that he’s seeing; he also identified some of the advisory profession’s most interesting and creative websites.