ADVFN Logo

We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.

Trending Now

Toplists

It looks like you aren't logged in.
Click the button below to log in and view your recent history.

Hot Features

Registration Strip Icon for charts Register for streaming realtime charts, analysis tools, and prices.
2x Long VIX Futures ETF

2x Long VIX Futures ETF (UVIX)

8.745
0.325
(3.86%)
At close: March 28 04:00PM
8.71
0.29
( 3.44% )
After Hours: 05:28PM

Get an advanced news scanner tailored to your needs by ADVFN

Enhance your trading experience

UVIX News

Official News Only
0 articles were found

UVIX Discussion

View Posts
Denisnj Denisnj 23 hours ago
Parabolic move tomorrow?
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
usaphilippines usaphilippines 2 days ago
Shawty got low but this is going up from 8s IMO
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
usaphilippines usaphilippines 2 days ago
In to tha bound
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
looking 4 a win looking 4 a win 4 days ago
What does inbound mean?
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
€LL-$G7$ €LL-$G7$ 4 days ago
Split inbound by late April I bet.
Uvxy happening next weeks
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
looking 4 a win looking 4 a win 7 days ago
How low can she go?
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
looking 4 a win looking 4 a win 1 week ago
New 52 low, split?
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
looking 4 a win looking 4 a win 2 weeks ago
Whatโ€™s wrong with this picture? (Chart)
Looks like nowhere to go but up or a big lead balloon.
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
tw0122 tw0122 3 months ago
UVIX $19.18 to $19.44 target
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
BottomBounce BottomBounce 6 months ago
Israel's war with Hamas puts new safe-haven focus on gold $UVIX
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
cuggegrosse cuggegrosse 7 months ago
Shorting this has been ok so far !!!!
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
looking 4 a win looking 4 a win 1 year ago
So there was a split today?
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
MoneyMaker111 MoneyMaker111 1 year ago
I like $UVIX here

$UVIX
#UVIX
👍️ 1
MoneyMaker111 MoneyMaker111 1 year ago
UVIX: I like UVIX here before the historic winter crash

$UVIX
#UVIX
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
munimi munimi 2 years ago
This was a pretty damn good call.
UVIX just hit $22 from $14s within a week , wow

Perhaps get some $13s on UVIX and $11s on UVXY seems like bargain hunting time coming here soon. Looks like the Big guys believe the 10 year yield canโ€™t go any higher then 3.0 it must come back down to meet the Fedโ€™s fund rate which is around 1.0.. as a matter of fact Wall Street believes stimulus coming again as the economy tanks.
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
tw0122 tw0122 2 years ago
Perhaps get some $13s on UVIX and $11s on UVXY seems like bargain hunting time coming here soon. Looks like the Big guys believe the 10 year yield canโ€™t go any higher then 3.0 it must come back down to meet the Fedโ€™s fund rate which is around 1.0.. as a matter of fact Wall Street believes stimulus coming again as the economy tanks.
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
tw0122 tw0122 2 years ago
Did oil cause the downturn?

The implication that almost all of the downturn of 2008 could be attributed to the oil shock is a stronger conclusion than emerged from any of the other models surveyed in my Brookings paper. Unquestionably, there were other very important shocks hitting the economy in 2007-08, most notably the problems in the housing sector. But housing had already been subtracting 0.94% from the average annual GDP growth rate over 2006:Q4-2007:Q3, when the economy did not appear to be in a recession. And housing subtracted only 0.89% over 2007:Q4-2008:Q3, when we now say that the economy was in recession. Something in addition to housing began to drag the economy down over the later period, and all the calculations in the paper support the conclusion that oil prices were an important factor in turning that slowdown into a recession.

There is also an interactive effect between the oil price shock and the problems in housing. Lost jobs and income were an important factor contributing to declines in home sales and prices, and the biggest initial declines in house prices and increases in delinquencies were in the areas farthest from the urban core, suggesting an interaction between housing demand and commuting costs. Once house price declines and concomitant delinquencies reached a sufficient level, the solvency of key financial institutions came into doubt. The resulting financial problems turned the mild recession we had been experiencing up until 2007:Q3 into a much more severe downturn in 2008:Q4 and 2009:Q1. Whether those financial problems were sufficiently insurmountable that we would have eventually arrived at the same crisis point even without the extra burden of the recession of 2007:Q4-2008:Q3 is a matter of conjecture. But it seems to me that oil prices indisputably made an important contribution to both the initial downturn and the magnitude of the problems weโ€™re currently facing.

It is also interesting that the observed dynamics over 2007:Q4-2008:Q4 are similar to those associated with earlier oil shocks and recessions. The biggest drops in GDP come significantly after the oil price shock itself. What we saw in earlier episodes was that the drops in spending caused by the oil price increases resulted in lost incomes and jobs in affected sectors, with those losses then magnifying other stresses on the economy and producing a multiplier dynamic that gathered force over subsequent quarters. The mortgage delinquencies and financial turmoil in the current episode are, of course, not the specific stresses that operated in earlier downturns, but the broad features of that multiplier process are surprisingly similar to the historical pattern.

My paper concludes that the economic downturn of 2007-08 should be added to the list of recessions to which oil prices appear to have made a material contribution.

Acknowledgment: The above was adapted from testimony by the author before the Joint Economic Committee of the US Congress and summaries at the website Econbrowser.
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0
tw0122 tw0122 2 years ago
Wall Street On Parade has been witnessing a persistent new pattern in the stock market for several months now where the market plunges at the open and then shortly thereafter, on no major news, it turns on a dime and spikes higher. This suggests one of two things to us: (1) either the New York Fed is manipulating stock trading out of its second office close to the futures markets in Chicago; or (2) big money at Wall Street trading houses and/or hedge funds are doing it. Either way, the SEC and the Justice Department have not nipped this activity in the bud.


On January 31, Wall Street On Parade reported that the New York Fed, which is the only one of the 12 regional Federal Reserve banks to have a trading floor โ€“ complete with those expensive Bloomberg data terminals and speed dials to Wall Streetโ€™s biggest trading houses โ€“ had decided, after 100 years of operation, that it needed a second trading floor in Chicago where S&P 500 futures are traded along with other futures contracts.

Wall Street On Parade has documented the bizarre price moves in the Dow Jones Industrial Average since March. Nothing about this is normal. If this is allowed to continue and the SEC does not explain, with credible details, who is behind these moves, whatโ€™s left of confidence in U.S. markets is going to evaporate.
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ0

Your Recent History

Delayed Upgrade Clock