Traders Build Back Hedges At Record Pace

by Dana Lyons

image

Relative volume in inverse ETF’s hit an all-time high yesterday.

Perhaps one of the reasons for the swiftness in the present stock market selloff is the fact that traders were totally unprepared for it. At least, their investment allocation would suggest that as the level of protective hedges was extremely low by most measures heading into October. And certainly any efforts at identifying a sustainable bottom to the selloff must include a substantial turnaround in these conditions. Well, at least by one hedging source, we may close to a low of some significance.

We are primarily funded by readers. Please subscribe and donate to support us!

The source in question is inverse ETF’s, i.e., funds that go up when the market goes down. When action is extremely subdued in these funds, it can be a sign of complacency – and risk of decline as traders have little protection, or hedging, on. On the other hand, when we see extremely high volume being traded in these funds, it can be a sign of fear – and a potential bottoming signal. That latter condition may be valid now because yesterday saw the heaviest volume ever in inverse ETF’s, as a percentage of overall exchange volume.

image

FYI, the computation for this indicator, which we first saw utilized on sentimentrader.com, is a proprietary one. It does not include an exhaustive array of inverse ETF’s, but rather a group that we have been tracking now for about 5 years. Thus, someone else may come up with entirely different figures, though, likely the same general curve.

The interpretation of this data is pretty straightforward. As we said, high levels of Inverse ETF volume can indicate fear and set the stage for a market bottom. As the chart shows, that has been the case at times in the past. So for those looking for a bounce, this is certainly a feather in their cap. Of course, the question is how much of a bounce will we get and how long will it last?

Views:

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.