KEY POINTS
  • Despite a deterioration in U.S.-China trade relations and a sell-off starting in early May and continuing through Monday, many hedge funds have closed positions betting on a VIX spike.
  • The call-to-put ratio for VIX options — that is, the percentage of people betting on a rise versus a fall in volatility — has since returned to lows not seen for months.
  • "It would appear that the majority of hedge funds do not expect another sharp rise in volatility, and that they have concluded that the correction has run its course," Nomura strategist Masanari Takada wrote.

The majority of U.S. hedge funds aren't expecting another big stock market sell-off as more firms curb bets on equity volatility, according to analysis at Nomura.

Despite a deterioration in U.S.-China trade relations and a stock sell-off starting in early May and continuing through Monday, many American hedge funds have closed positions betting on a rise in the Cboe Volatility Index within the last week. Those diminished bets for volatility suggest that some of Wall Street's biggest players believe the equity decline is finally over, according to strategist Masanari Takada.