Showing posts with label Graph Of Market Volatility. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graph Of Market Volatility. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

"This is the type of volatility that we typically see in frontier and emerging markets -- not the biggest, most developed market in the world."

Yesterday we spoke of market volatility. Here's a graph from Bespoke:

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The Volatility Bubble -- Average Daily Change Now Above 4%!

A couple of weeks ago, we did a post showing that the 50-day average daily change of the S&P 500 was higher than at any other point in the index's history. After yesterday's close, another record was eclipsed when the average daily change moved above +/-4%! As shown below, this volatility blows away even the highest levels reached during the Great Depression.

Up until the start of 2008, a daily move of 4% in a 50-day period was noteworthy. From 1945 through 2007, the S&P 500 had 49 one-day moves of 4% or more, which is an average of less than one per year. This year we've had 28! For a market as big as the United States to average a 4.02% daily change over a 50-day period is truly astounding. This is the type of volatility that we typically see in frontier and emerging markets -- not the biggest, most developed market in the world. The volatility bubble won't last forever, and being long it at this stage of the game is a very risky bet.

50dayaverageabsolute