An eerie calm
The fact that implied—ie, expected—volatility in financial markets is so low should give investors everywhere pause for thought
THERE are few beasts in the financial jungle more curious than the market in uncertainty. Traders buy and sell uncertainty as readily as if it were something tangible, like pork bellies or Treasury bonds. Strange though it may seem, it is no exaggeration to say that the price of just about every risky asset in the world depends in part on investors' perceptions about the price of uncertainty. It is precisely because investors appear so certain about the future that the prices of so many assets are now so high. The opposite holds too, of course. If investors became less certain, those prices would fall.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “An eerie calm”
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