Captures explosive moves following volatility compression
| Strategy Type | Volatility Expansion / Momentum |
| Market Outlook | Captures explosive moves following volatility compression |
| Risk Profile | Moderate to High - volatility-based stops can be wide |
| Reward Profile | Asymmetric - targets large moves from volatility expansion |
| Time Horizon | Intraday to multi-day depending on compression timeframe; SGX T (day) and T+1 (night) sessions allow holding across the US overnight catalyst |
| Capital Requirement | Moderate to High (approx. US$10,000 - US$40,000 for volatility-adjusted multi-contract sizing; a single A50 or SiMSCI contract is accessible from roughly US$1,500 - US$2,500 of exchange margin) |
| Margin Type | Exchange-set initial/maintenance margin (SGX-DC). Many brokers offer reduced intraday day-trade margins for the T session; full overnight margin applies to positions carried into the T+1 night session and beyond |
| Best Used When | After volatility compression (squeeze), before major events, at key inflection points, when CBOE VIX / Nikkei VI is low and transitioning higher (often into the T+1 session ahead of US trade) |
| Sgx Applicability | All liquid SGX equity index futures; especially effective on FTSE China A50 (the flagship by liquidity), Nikkei 225 and FTSE Taiwan; SiMSCI provides direct Singapore-market exposure. Single Stock Futures (SSFs) are less liquid and generally avoided for this strategy |
| Mas Compliance | Fully compliant - standard exchange-traded futures listed on SGX-DT and cleared by SGX-DC, regulated by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) under the Securities and Futures Act (SFA). Trades are executed through MAS-licensed Capital Markets Services (CMS) holders |
| Contract Specifications | US$1 x index (ticker CN); minimum tick 1 index point = US$1; USD-denominated; cash-settled • JPY500 x index (ticker NK); minimum tick 5 index points = JPY2,500; a USD-denominated version trades at US$5 x index (ticker NU); cash-settled; CME Mutual Offset eligible • US$40 x index (ticker TWN); minimum tick 0.25 index point = US$10; USD-denominated; cash-settled • S$100 x index (ticker SGP); minimum tick 0.05 index point = S$5; SGD-denominated; cash-settled |
| Trading Hours | Varies by contract; SGX offers near-24-hour coverage via a T (day) and T+1 (night) session, all Singapore Time. A50: 9:00am-4:30pm and 4:45pm-5:15am. Nikkei 225: 7:30am-2:55pm and 3:10pm-5:15am. SiMSCI: 8:30am-5:25pm and 5:35pm-5:15am. FTSE Taiwan tracks the Taiwan cash session plus a T+1 night session |
| Expiry Considerations | Volatility often compresses mid-cycle and expands near expiry; be aware of gamma effects. SGX index futures roll on a quarterly cycle (Mar, Jun, Sep, Dec) plus the nearest serial months, and are cash-settled, so there is no delivery risk - only roll/basis risk near the Last Trading Day |
| Tax Implications | Singapore imposes no capital gains tax. For an individual, gains from buying and selling futures, options and other financial instruments are generally treated as non-taxable personal investment (capital) gains. Profits become taxable as income at progressive resident rates (up to 24% for the top band from YA2024) only if IRAS assesses the activity as carrying on a trade or business under the common-law 'badges of trade' - frequency and volume of transactions, holding period, method of financing, profit-seeking intention and whether trading is a primary livelihood. There is no Securities Transaction Tax / stamp duty on exchange-traded derivatives, and trading gains are not subject to GST. This treatment differs fundamentally from India's speculative / non-speculative income split |
| Liquidity Notes | A50 is the most liquid contract and the natural primary vehicle; Nikkei 225 and FTSE Taiwan are deeply liquid and US-overnight sensitive; SiMSCI is thinner but adequate after its smaller-contract reform. Volatility breakouts need liquidity for clean execution - the index futures above are preferred over SSFs |
Compression duration varies widely: intraday squeezes can last 2-6 hours, daily squeezes typically 5-15 days, weekly squeezes can persist for weeks. The key is adequate duration for energy to build - don't trade squeezes that are only 1-2 days old. Longer compression often leads to more powerful expansion. Track historical compression durations for your instruments to calibrate expectations.
No, and you shouldn't try. The volatility breakout strategy is explicitly direction-agnostic. You wait for price to show you the direction by closing outside the compression range. Attempting to predict direction defeats the strategy's purpose - you'll either miss breakouts or fight against them. Let the market decide; your job is to be ready to follow. On SGX products the direction is frequently set overnight by the US session, so be prepared to follow the move that develops in the T+1 session.
False breakouts happen - accept this reality. Protection: 1) Stop inside compression range ensures limited loss. 2) Volume confirmation filter reduces false signals. 3) Wait for close beyond bands, not just wick. 4) Require adequate compression duration before trading. If stopped out, don't re-enter immediately - wait to see if a reverse-direction breakout develops. False breakouts in one direction sometimes lead to strong moves in the opposite direction.
Signs of expansion ending: 1) ATR starts declining after expanding. 2) Price momentum slowing (smaller candles). 3) Chandelier exit getting hit. 4) CBOE VIX / Nikkei VI returning to normal levels. 5) Bollinger Bands starting to narrow again. Use ATR-based trailing stops to automatically capture the expansion and exit when volatility normalizes. Don't try to pick the exact top/bottom of the expansion - systematic exits handle this.
Related but different. Price breakout trades levels (support/resistance). Volatility breakout trades the compression-expansion cycle regardless of specific levels. Volatility breakout focuses on the magnitude of movement, not the location. A volatility breakout can occur without breaking any traditional support/resistance. Both can occur simultaneously for higher-conviction trades. Price breakout needs clear levels; volatility breakout works in any market structure.
Use ATR-based position sizing: Lots = Risk Amount / (ATR x Multiplier x Point Value). This automatically adjusts: low ATR (compression) = larger positions with tight stops; high ATR (expansion) = smaller positions with wider stops. Additionally, in different VIX regimes: CBOE VIX < 15 (ideal) = full position size; VIX 15-20 (normal) = 75% size; VIX > 20 (elevated) = 50% size. The goal is consistent currency risk regardless of volatility conditions - and remember that a high-multiplier contract like SiMSCI consumes more risk budget per lot than A50.
Bollinger-only squeeze: bands narrowing relative to recent history - more frequent signals, some false squeezes. Keltner-Bollinger squeeze: bands moving INSIDE Keltner Channels - rarer, more reliable, signals extreme compression. The Keltner addition filters out weaker squeezes. For high-conviction trades, use Keltner-Bollinger. For more frequent opportunities with a higher false signal rate, use Bollinger alone with additional filters (VIX, volume, duration).
SGX has no single domestic VIX, so use a composite. The CBOE VIX gives market-wide context and drives the overnight / T+1 session: 1) VIX < 15 = extreme compression, ideal for new squeeze hunting, 2) VIX turning up from lows = expansion beginning, confirms breakout, 3) VIX > 25 = expansion mature, be cautious with new entries, 4) VIX spike = crisis, focus on protection. The Nikkei VI is the most direct gauge for Nikkei 225 trades, and the VHSI is a China / A50 proxy. Best entries: VIX at lows (compression) combined with an instrument-specific squeeze. Worst entries: low VIX that stays low (no catalyst) or high VIX (expansion already happened).
Weekly timeframes work but require patience and larger capital. Pros: less noise, more reliable signals, larger moves. Cons: signals are rare (few per year), larger stops required, more capital tied up. Approach: use weekly for highest-conviction long-term positions, daily for regular trading. Weekly squeeze + daily squeeze alignment = highest probability setup. Start with the daily timeframe before scaling to weekly.
Effective combination: 1) Identify compression on the daily chart, 2) Check weekly trend direction, 3) If breakout aligns with weekly trend, full conviction, 4) If counter-weekly, reduce size or skip. Additional: use 50 EMA slope as a filter - breakout in direction of slope has higher probability. ADX rising confirms trend developing. This doesn't predict breakout direction but filters for higher probability once direction is known.
Components: 1) Compression detection - BB Width percentile < 20% (100-day lookback), 2) Duration filter - squeeze active 5+ days, 3) Breakout trigger - close outside bands AND ATR > yesterday x 1.10, 4) Volume filter - volume > 1.5x 20-day average, 5) Position sizing - ATR-inverse sizing, 6) Stop - 2x ATR or inside compression range, 7) Exit - Chandelier (3 ATR) or ATR returns to 50th percentile. Backtest 500+ trades over 7+ years and, for SGX products, segment by T vs T+1 session because the night session tracks live US trade. Walk-forward validation essential. Expect 45-55% win rate, 2:1+ R:R.
Pre-breakout: 1) Long straddle/strangle during squeeze - profits from expansion either direction, benefits from IV rise. Post-breakout: 2) Replace futures with directional options for defined risk. 3) Sell opposite side options to collect premium with directional bias. 4) Calendar spreads - sell high near-term IV post-expansion, buy longer-term. Advanced: 5) Delta-hedge a straddle to capture pure volatility expansion. SGX lists options on Nikkei 225, SiMSCI and the A50. IV dynamics are key: options are cheap during the squeeze (low IV) and expensive after expansion (high IV).
Framework: 1) US VIX correlation - spikes in US VIX precede expansion across A50, Nikkei and Taiwan, often firing in the T+1 session, 2) USD/CNH volatility - China currency vol expansion can signal flows into A50; USD/JPY maps to Nikkei, 3) Crude oil and iron ore volatility - commodity vol spikes affect Asian equities, 4) Global indices - S&P/Nasdaq overnight moves drive the SGX night session. Implementation: build a volatility dashboard tracking these gauges. Alert when multiple assets show compression breaking simultaneously. Best signals: VIX low + global volatility starting to expand = imminent expansion in SGX products.
Regime transition management: 1) Low to normal VIX - ride the expansion, trail with Chandelier, 2) Normal to high VIX - tighten stops, take partial profits, no new entries, 3) VIX spike (30%+ jump) - move to defensive, consider hedges, exit marginal positions. Automated triggers: when CBOE VIX crosses above 20, reduce new entry sizes 50%; when VIX crosses 25, pause new volatility breakout entries. Always adjust trailing stops tighter in high VIX regime - expansion moves become erratic. For SGX products, much of this transition is imported overnight from the US, so re-assess at each session open.
Key pitfalls: 1) Overfitting - parameters optimized perfectly for the past don't work forward; use walk-forward testing, 2) Ignoring regime - the system works in compression regimes and fails in extended high vol, 3) False squeeze detection - too-sensitive triggers fire on many non-squeeze compressions; require minimum duration, 4) Whipsaw periods - transition periods create multiple false signals; use confirmation filters, 5) Position sizing errors - not adjusting for ATR or for differing contract multipliers leads to inconsistent risk, 6) Session blindness - ignoring the T-to-T+1 handover and thin night-session liquidity. Solutions: robust parameter ranges, a regime detection layer, adequate filters, automatic ATR-sizing, and regular strategy review.
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