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2023 Will Be a Volatile Year. Options Investors Should Be Happy.

2023 Will Be a Volatile Year. Options Investors Should Be Happy.

Posted December 16, 2022
Steven M. Sears
Barron's

When VIX is high, it’s time to buy. When VIX is low, it’s time to go. When VIX is flat, sell calls against that.

If you remember that trading ditty—which we have tweaked for 2023 in anticipation that extreme moves up and down in the stock market will give way to stretches of sideways trading—you should have a reasonable action plan for the new year.

The Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX—the so-called fear gauge—is a useful tool for framing what is likely to be an erratic year for investors.

Everyone knows that the Federal Reserve has ended the easy-money policies that helped propel stocks ever higher for the past two decades. But no one really knows what happens next following a series of aggressive interest-rate hikes that were intended to tamp inflation.

There is considerable disagreement around the Fed’s ability to engineer a soft landing by raising rates to slow inflation without pushing the economy into a recession and thus walloping the stock market.

If a recession occurs in the first quarter, it would probably presage lower corporate earnings, which would lower stock multiples—and that, in turn, would drive down stock prices and push VIX higher.

Despite dramatic differences of opinion about how the market will behave next year, few people have experience dealing with the financial conditions and interest-rate issues that now confront us—and that probably portends more volatility.

Next year is likely to be a strange amalgamation of known unknowns (Fed rate hikes whose size are hotly debated) and unknown unknowns (how they express themselves in the market and economy).

All that means is that investors should expect an erratic, choppy market as rate hikes affect the economy. Such conditions tend to favor options investors. It also makes VIX a useful contrarian indicator. Or to put it another way: When VIX telegraphs extreme fear, think about being bullish, and vice versa.

When VIX is above 30, it suggests that investors are more bearish than bullish and that they are buying put options to hedge against stock declines. Bullish investors could sell cash-secured puts to monetize that fear and profit from a potential snapback rally.

When VIX is below 19, it suggests that investors are complacent—or at least not mindful of market risks—and that any stock rallies are likely to run out of steam.

If VIX wanders between, say, 18 and 24, it probably suggests that investors are unsure of what to make of the passing scene. A low VIX reading could favor buying defensive puts to hedge stocks or portfolios, or even selling call options to enhance yields on stalled stocks.

The market mob almost always overreacts. It is that overreaction—the panic that sets in when VIX spikes, or the confidence about the future when it falls—that creates conditions for the opposite to happen.

The mystery of what comes next should lead to a resurgence in stock-picking and cause some investors to move away from an overreliance on index funds. If a rising tide no longer lifts all ships, investors will try to find the ships that have some race in them.

Because it’s riskier to pick stocks than to pick hot sectors, the appeal of equity call options that expire in six months or more is likely to increase—despite the higher cost of a longer time premium.

Of course, we could be wrong about the erratic nature of 2023’s stock market. Even so, using options to buy fear and sell confidence, while selling calls on stalled stocks, is unlikely to harm investors over the long run.

Originally Posted December 15, 2022 – 2023 Will Be a Volatile Year. Options Investors Should Be Happy.

Steven M. Sears is the president and chief operating officer of Options Solutions, a specialized asset-management firm. Neither he nor the firm has a position in the options or underlying securities mentioned in this column.

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