Average VIX and Volatility for Last Fourteen Presidents
What
kind of VIX is appropriate for the Trump Administration?
For
investors in general and volatility traders in particular, this is one of the more
interesting questions going into 2017.
Should the VIX be higher or lower in the context of a Trump
Administration relative to the Obama Administration? How much economic policy uncertainty is there
in Trumponomics? How will various
geopolitical issues wax and wane in the context of a Trump-Tillerson foreign policy
agenda?
While
these questions are difficult ones, what is not difficult is looking in the
rear-view mirror for some historical context, so that is exactly what I did,
calculating the historical
volatility for each presidency going back to the Hoover Administration. In order to take advantage of stock data
prior to the 1950s, one has to make use of the DJIA rather than S&P
averages. While VIX data is even more
interesting, the VIX was not launched until Bill Clinton’s inauguration and
historically reconstructed data from the CBOE only extends back to George H. W.
Bush’s presidential term.
The
results of the number crunching are included in the chart below and show
Herbert Hoover’s historical volatility of 42.87 more than double that of the
runner-up, Franklin Delano Roosevelt who posted a historical volatility of
20.88. The only other president to top
the 20 level in terms of historical volatility was George W. Bush at 20.28.
At the other end of the spectrum, the least volatile presidency was that
of Lyndon B. Johnson, where HV averaged an amazingly low 9.12. Following LBJ on the low end are Dwight
Eisenhower at 10.70 and Harry Truman at 12.20.
[source(s): CBOE, Yahoo, VIX and More]
Among
recent presidents, three of the last four presidencies (George W. Bush is the exception) have seen middling
volatility, with Barack Obama 6th of 14 as of today’s data, while
Bill Clinton is 7th and George H. W. Bush in 8th place.
Since
the eye canot help but see trends and patterns whether they exist in real life
or not, I am obliged to observe that since the LBJ presidency there is a
pattern of higher highs and higher lows.
Could volatility by presidential term be trending up? I am certainly not ready to go that far.
In
terms of key takeaways, it is worth noting that the median historical
volatility (combining data from Bill Clinton and George H. W. Bush) indicates
that a middle-of-the-road presidency can expect historical volatility of 14.65
and a VIX of 18.91. As far as the VIX is
concerned, the 18.91 number aligns nicely with current VIX futures
quotes for May and June 2017.
Related posts:
- Post-Election Risk Trending Up in Treasuries and the Euro, Down in U.S. Stocks
- Volatility During Crises
- Event Risk, Event Theta and the Next Week
- Fear of Governments and Politicians Climb Rapidly as Euro Zone Worries Wane
- Volcker Endorses Obama
- The Case Against High Stock-Market Volatility in 2016 (Guest Columnist at Barron’s)
- Forces Acting on the VIX
- A Conceptual Framework for Volatility Events
Disclosure(s): the CBOE is an advertiser on VIX and More