Hedging Tail Risk with Robust VIXY Models

Extreme market events, once perceived as statistical outliers, have become a central concern for investors. The persistence of sharp drawdowns and volatility spikes demonstrates that the cost of ignoring tail risks is not tolerable for long-term portfolio resilience. While diversification can mitigate ordinary fluctuations, it often fails when markets move in unison under stress. This makes explicit protection against severe downside events not just desirable but necessary. Tail hedging addresses this need by providing a structured defense against the most damaging scenarios, ensuring that portfolios remain robust when traditional risk management tools fall short. Using VIXY ETF, we will present and test a range of hedging strategies designed to protect portfolios under stress. By applying robust testing frameworks, we aim to evaluate how different implementations of VIXY ETF-based tail hedges perform across a variety of market environments, highlighting both their strengths and inherent trade-offs.

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Cross-Sectional and Dollar Components of Currency Risk Premia

Currency strategies often appear simple on the surface – go long high-yielding currencies, short low-yielding ones, or take a position on the U.S. dollar. But these trades actually mix two distinct components: a Dollar component, which bets on broad movements of the U.S. dollar against all others, and a Cross-Sectional (CS) component, which exploits relative differences across countries. The question is, which of these components really drives currency risk premia? A new paper by Vahid Rostamkhani tackles this long-standing question by decomposing the predictive power of eleven macroeconomic fundamentals—such as interest rates, inflation, unemployment, and fiscal variables—into these two components across almost a century of data (1926-2023). This approach directly tests whether it is more rewarding to time the dollar itself or to focus on cross-country fundamental spreads.

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Leveraged ETFs in Low-Volatility Environments

Leveraged ETFs (such as SPXL – (Direxion Daily S&P 500 Bull 3X Shares) offer amplified exposure to the S&P 500, promising high returns but exposing investors to volatility drag caused by daily rebalancing. This effect can significantly erode performance over longer horizons, particularly during periods of elevated market volatility. Inspired by recent research, The Volatility Edge, A Dual Approach For VIX ETNs Trading, focused on volatility-linked ETNs, we propose a volatility filter that adjusts ETF exposure based on the relationship between short-term realized volatility and implied volatility. By reducing exposure in high-volatility periods and maintaining it in calmer markets, this approach aims to harness leverage effectively while mitigating the most damaging drawdowns.

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What Drives the Excess Bond Premium?

The Excess Bond Premium (EBP – the portion of corporate bond spreads not explained by default risk), a key metric in quantitative finance for gauging credit spreads, has long been a subject of intense scrutiny. Recent research sheds new light on its dynamics, moving beyond traditional macroeconomic factors to explore the role of information flow. By analyzing news attention across 180 topics, a significant portion of the EBP’s variation can be explained, offering a novel lens to understand its fluctuations and predictive power.

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Quantpedia in August 2025

Hello all,

What have we accomplished in the last month?

– Parametrization of the Trading Edge and Technical Analysis reports
– 12 new Quantpedia Premium strategies have been added to our database
– 11 new related research papers have been included in existing Premium strategies during the last month
– Additionally, we have produced 9 new backtests written in QuantConnect code
– 5 new blog posts that you may find interesting have been published on our Quantpedia blog in the previous month

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Surprisingly Profitable Pre-Holiday Drift Signal for Bitcoin

Cryptocurrency markets have matured into a distinct asset class characterized by extreme volatility, deep liquidity pools, and worldwide retail participation. Traditional equity and commodity markets exhibit a well-documented pre-holiday effect, where returns on trading days immediately preceding public holidays tend to outperform other days. Given that Bitcoin is often described as the archetypal absolute risk asset, it is natural to hypothesize that any calendar-driven anomalies observed in equities should manifest—or even amplify—in crypto markets.

However, unlike equity markets, where institutional investors and marketing calendars drive collective behavior, crypto markets are more dispersed, retail-dominated, and influenced by nontraditional information flows. This article investigates whether the classic pre-holiday effect applies to Bitcoin and assesses the extent to which it can be amplified by an attention-grabbing momentum filter based on local price highs.

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Bitcoin ETFs in Conventional Multi-Asset Portfolios

Understanding how Bitcoin-related instruments can fit into traditional portfolios is increasingly relevant for investors. Some risk-averse investors do not like to hold cryptocurrencies in their portfolios strategically; however, they may be open to investing in crypto-linked assets on a tactical level. In this context, our goal is to explore how we can provide short-term Bitcoin exposure while contributing to overall portfolio balance and potential downside protection.

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How Can We Explain the Low-Risk Anomaly?

The low-risk anomaly in financial markets has puzzled researchers and investors, challenging the traditional risk-return paradigm (higher risk->higher return). This phenomenon, where low-risk assets outperform their high-risk counterparts on a risk-adjusted basis, has been observed across various asset classes, including stocks and mutual funds. What may be the possible explanation? Pass-through mutual funds, which aim to replicate the performance of specific market indices, play a crucial role in this context by channeling investor flows and potentially influencing asset prices through demand pressure.

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