April 2nd drove the point home- when someone in a position to know tells you something big is coming on a precise date, it is a smart time to act. As opposed to doing what I have done, which is think about acting but ultimately do nothing.
Ahead of April 2nd this year, the White House made a big deal of how they had a big announcement on trade coming April 2nd and I thought “this could go better or worse than markets expect, but some big move is coming, this seems like a great time to invest in volatility through something like VIX options expiring shortly after April 2nd”, but then I didn’t buy VIX options. I didn’t totally understand how they worked, didn’t want to buy without finding out, and didn’t make time to find out. My instinct was right though- the VIX more than doubled last week, so the right options on it much more than doubled.


Ahead of the war in Ukraine in February 2022, US intelligence warned that Russia was planning to invade imminently, and I thought “they don’t have a great recent track record but it is very unusual for them to announce something so big will happen so soon, this is probably happening, this would be a good time to buy puts” but then didn’t buy puts, which of course did great as markets crashed following the invasion.
Yesterday the S&P 500 shot up 9% on the news that most of Trump’s new tariffs were paused. I thought this reaction was excessive given that the tariffs weren’t canceled, merely paused 90 days. Note that an exact date is being offered- July 8th! I sold some stocks last night and put in orders for S&P puts and VIX calls, but the limit options orders didn’t fill today as it seems the market caught up to my take from last night. The S&P is down 4% as I write this. This morning I was was researching which puts to buy, leaning toward SPY or XSP at-the-money puts for July 19 (first options date available after the 90-day tariff delay expires), then markets opened and their prices jumped 20+% in seconds as I watched. They are up over 50% now.
It is possible that the administration will fully clarify their stance on tariffs one way or another before July 8th, or even that Congress takes back their tariff power before then and makes their own deal. But I think it is more likely than not that we get a big announcement from the White House on July 8th about which tariffs will be implemented. In which case July 8th will be another wild market day.
This may already be priced in, but so far this April the situation has been changing so rapidly and touching so many parts of the markets and the real economy that even some of the most efficient markets (like US stock and bond markets) seem to be struggling to process what is happening. My ill-timed post from November praising the S&P has some lines that hold up well:
I’m now back up to 90% belief in efficient markets, at least for stocks.
This efficiency seems to change a lot over time. Probably fewer than 10% of US stocks have obvious mis-pricings right now; really none stand out as super mispriced to a casual observer like me. Instead, it seems like every 10 years or so a broad swathe of the market is driven crazy by a bubble or a crash, and you get lots of mispricing- like tech in 2000, forced/panic selling at the bottom in 2009, or meme stocks in 2021. The rest of the time, the stock market is quite efficient. So, in typical times, just be boring and buy and hold a broad index fund.
Ever since April 2nd, we have not been in typical times. At some point they will return and most people are probably best served by just holding through this (selling at the bottom and never getting back in is a big failure mode in investing). But for now the tariffs still have me thinking about buying VIX calls and stock puts (especially when policy changes loom on certain dates like July 8th), and on the bigger question of finding the sort of investments that did well in the 1970’s, another decade of stagflation that was kicked off by a President who broke America’s commitment to an international monetary system that he thought no longer served us.
For short term bets on VIX going up or down, there are convenient ETF vehicles like VIXY (long VIX) and SVXY (short VIX x 0.5). They have serious problems with holding for more than say 1-2 weeks, which I won’t elaborate on.
Most brokers I am aware of don’t offer options on VIX. Maybe Schwab and Interactive Brokers?
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A well-analyzed take on how Trump-era policies continue to shape financial markets.
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