Monday, August 15, 2022

A VIX Futures Trading System

VIX futures are a type of derivative that allows investors to bet on the future direction of the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX). The VIX is a measure of market uncertainty and is often referred to as the "fear index." VIX futures allow investors to hedge against or speculate on future changes in the VIX.

Reference [1] presented a systematic approach for trading the VIX futures,

We propose a new approach for trading VIX futures. We assume that the term structure of VIX futures follows a Markov model. Our trading strategy selects a position in VIX futures by maximizing the expected utility for a day-ahead horizon given the current shape and level of the term structure. Computationally, we model the functional dependence between the VIX futures curve, the VIX futures positions, and the expected utility as a deep neural network with five hidden layers. Out-of-sample backtests of the VIX futures trading strategy suggest that this approach gives rise to reasonable portfolio performance, and to positions in which the investor will be either long or short VIX futures contracts depending on the market environment.

An interesting aspect of this paper is that it made use of a utility function to generate trading signals. The authors also performed thorough out-of-sample testing using the k-fold cross-validation,

 A standard procedure for in-sample training and out-of-sample testing is straightforward: divide the data into two blocks, with the first block designated for in-sample training, and the second block designated for out-of-sample testing. More specifically, we take the VIX futures curves from April 14th of 2008 to August 7th of 2019 for in-sample training, and then utilize the remaining curves from August 8th of 2019 to November 5th of 2020 for out-of-sample testing. But this out- of-sample test is based on a single portfolio run, which means that good performance could be attributable to luck. Therefore, to make full usage of the data, we apply the method of the k-fold cross-validation.

Applying a rigorous out-of-sample testing procedure is necessary in trading system design. This step is, however, often ignored.

References

[1] M. Avellaneda, T. N. Li, A. Papanicolaou, G. Wang, Trading Signals In VIX Futures, 2021, https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2103.02016

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