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 |
| Capital Requirement | Moderate to High (£20,000 - £60,000 for volatility-adjusted futures sizing; smaller per-point spread betting needs less, e.g. £2,000 - £10,000) |
| Margin Type | Intraday (reduced) margin for day trades; full overnight/initial margin for positional breakouts. Retail CFD/spread-bet margin under FCA caps: ~5% for FTSE indices, ~20% for single stocks |
| Best Used When | After volatility compression (squeeze), before major events (BoE/Fed decisions, UK CPI, US payrolls), at key inflection points, low VFTSE transitioning higher |
| Lse Ice Applicability | All liquid FTSE index futures on ICE Futures Europe; especially effective on FTSE 100. FTSE 250 is thinner. Most UK retail traders access the same exposure via FTSE CFDs/spread bets rather than the underlying futures |
| Fca Compliance | Fully compliant - standard exchange-traded futures (ICE Futures Europe) or FCA-regulated CFDs/spread bets. Retail CFD/spread-bet rules apply: leverage capped (20:1 major indices, 5:1 single stocks), 50% margin close-out, negative balance protection, and standardised risk warnings |
| Lot Sizes | 1 futures contract = £10 per index point (ICE); tick 0.5 pt = £5. Spread bet/CFD: choose £ per point • 1 futures contract = £10 per index point (ICE); tick 1.0 pt = £10 (verify current contract spec with your broker) • Flexible sizing, e.g. £1 - £10 per point per the chosen stake • Via CFDs/spread bets - exchange-traded single-stock futures are illiquid for UK retail |
| Trading Hours | LSE cash session 8:00 AM - 4:30 PM London time (GMT/BST). FTSE 100 futures on ICE trade with extended hours (~01:00 - 21:00 London); core liquidity is in the cash session |
| Expiry Considerations | FTSE index futures expire quarterly (Mar/Jun/Sep/Dec), third Friday, settled via the EDSP intra-day auction (~10:10-10:15 London) - NOT at the close. The quarterly roll and triple-witching can spike volatility; there are no weekly index-future expiries |
| Tax Implications | Exchange-traded futures and CFDs = gains subject to Capital Gains Tax (18% basic / 24% higher rate, 2026/27) above the £3,000 annual exempt amount (CFD losses offsettable, exempt from stamp duty). Spread bets = tax-free (HMRC treats as gambling) but losses are not offsettable |
| Liquidity Notes | Volatility breakouts need liquidity for clean execution; FTSE 100 futures/CFDs preferred. FTSE 250 and single-stock CFDs are thinner - widen expectations for slippage on breakout fills |
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.
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 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) VFTSE 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: Contracts = Risk Amount / (ATR × Multiplier × Point Value). This automatically adjusts: low ATR (compression) = larger positions with tight stops; high ATR (expansion) = smaller positions with wider stops. Additionally, in different VFTSE regimes: VFTSE < 13 (ideal) = full position size; VFTSE 13-18 (normal) = 75% size; VFTSE > 18 (elevated) = 50% size. The goal is consistent monetary risk regardless of volatility conditions.
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 higher false signal rate, use Bollinger alone with additional filters (VFTSE, volume, duration).
VFTSE provides market-wide volatility context: 1) VFTSE < 13 = extreme compression, ideal for new squeeze hunting, 2) VFTSE turning up from lows = expansion beginning, confirms breakout, 3) VFTSE > 18 = expansion mature, be cautious with new entries, 4) VFTSE spike = crisis, focus on protection. Best entries: VFTSE at lows (compression) combined with instrument-specific squeeze. Worst entries: low VFTSE that stays low (no catalyst) or high VFTSE (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 daily timeframe before scaling to weekly.
Effective combination: 1) Identify compression on 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 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 × 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. 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 straddle to capture pure volatility expansion. IV dynamics key: options are cheap during squeeze (low IV), expensive after expansion (high IV). FTSE 100 options on ICE are European-style and cash-settled.
Framework: 1) US VIX correlation - spikes in US VIX often precede VFTSE expansion, 2) GBP/USD volatility - currency vol expansion can signal shifts in overseas flows and feed equity vol, 3) Brent crude volatility - energy vol spikes affect the FTSE 100 given its heavy energy weighting, 4) Global indices - DAX, CAC 40, EURO STOXX 50 volatility contagion. Implementation: build a volatility dashboard tracking global vol indicators. Alert when multiple assets show compression breaking simultaneously. Best signals: VFTSE low + global volatility starting to expand = imminent domestic expansion.
Regime transition management: 1) Low to normal VFTSE - ride the expansion, trail with Chandelier, 2) Normal to high VFTSE - tighten stops, take partial profits, no new entries, 3) VFTSE spike (30%+ jump) - move to defensive, consider hedges, exit marginal positions. Rule-based triggers: when VFTSE crosses above 18, reduce new entry sizes 50%; when VFTSE crosses 22, pause new volatility breakout entries. Always adjust trailing stops tighter in high VFTSE regime - expansion moves become erratic.
Key pitfalls: 1) Overfitting - parameters optimized perfectly for past don't work forward; use walk-forward testing, 2) Ignoring regime - system works in compression regimes, fails in extended high vol, 3) False squeeze detection - too sensitive triggers 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 leads to inconsistent risk. Solutions: robust parameter ranges, regime detection layer, adequate filters, automatic ATR-sizing, regular strategy review.
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