VIX and Equities: The Negative Correlation Mechanics
VIX and the S&P 500 share a structurally negative, asymmetric correlation; traders quantify it to size hedges and time mean reversion.
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VIX and Equities: The Negative Correlation Mechanics
The VIX–S&P 500 negative correlation is one of the most reliable in finance, but most traders use it as a vague fear gauge instead of a quantifiable hedge signal. The correlation is structurally negative, asymmetric, and mean-reverting — three properties you can exploit with rules.
Why the correlation is negative
VIX is implied volatility derived from S&P 500 option prices. Equity drops increase demand for downside puts, pushing implied vol higher. Equity rallies reduce hedging demand, pushing vol lower. The relationship is also asymmetric: VIX rises roughly 1.3–1.5 times faster in a selloff than it falls in a rally of the same size. This asymmetry is why short-volatility strategies bleed slowly and blow up fast.
Quantifying it
The long-run daily correlation between S&P 500 returns and VIX changes sits near -0.75. In selloffs it approaches -0.9; in quiet grind-ups it weakens to -0.4. A rolling 30-day correlation below -0.7 confirms the hedge relationship is active. When correlation weakens above -0.4, VIX is losing its inverse linkage — often a warning that a regime change is forming.
Using VIX as an equity hedge
Size a VIX call or long-vol hedge to the equity delta you want protected. A long VIX call position gains roughly $0.70–$0.80 per VIX point for an at-the-money contract on a 1-point spike. For a $100k equity book with 1.0 beta, a 3-point VIX spike typically coincides with a 2–3% equity drop, or $2,000–$3,000. A small VIX call spread caps hedge cost while preserving convexity during a gap.
Mean-reversion edges
VIX mean-reverts toward roughly 19–20. Read the term structure: when the front-month VIX futures trade above the second month (backwardation), stress is acute and short-VIX has positive expected value on a 5–10 day horizon. Contango (front below back) is the normal state and signals complacency.
The bottom line
The VIX–equity correlation is structurally negative and asymmetric. Track the 30-day correlation; below -0.7 the hedge works, above -0.4 stand aside. Use backwardation as a mean-reversion signal and size VIX hedges to the equity delta you actually carry. The edge is in the mechanics, not the fear narrative.
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