OPEN-SOURCE SCRIPT

vol_premia

已更新
This script shows the volatility risk premium for several instruments. The premium is simply "IV30 - RV20". Although Tradingview doesn't provide options prices, CBOE publishes 30-day implied volatilities for many instruments (most of which are VIX variations). CBOE calculates these in a standard way, weighting at- and out-of-the-money IVs for options that expire in 30 days, on average. For realized volatility, I used the standard deviation of log returns. Since there are twenty trading periods in 30 calendar days, IV30 can be compared to RV20. The "premium" is the difference, which reflects market participants' expectation for how much upcoming volatility will over- or under-shoot recent volatility.

The script loads pretty slow since there are lots of symbols, so feel free to delete the ones you don't care about. Hopefully the code is straightforward enough. I won't list the meaning of every symbols here, since I might change them later, but you can type them into tradingview for data, and read about their volatility index on CBOE's website. Some of the more well-known ones are:

ES: S&P futures, which I prefer to the SPX index). Its implied volatility is VIX.
USO: the oil ETF representing WTI future prices. Its IV is OVX.
GDX: the gold miner's ETF, which is usually more volatile than gold. Its IV is VXGDX.
FXI: a china ETF, whose volatility is VXFXI.

And so on. In addition to the premium, the "percentile" column shows where this premium ranks among the previous 252 trading days. 100 = the highest premium, 0 = the lowest premium.
發行說明
fixed the single-stock percentiles and changed a color
發行說明
moved table to the middle so it doesn't interfere with other stuff on the screen
impliedvolatilitypremiumrealizedvolatilitySPX (S&P 500 Index)VIX CBOE Volatility IndexVolatility

開源腳本

在真正的TradingView精神中,這個腳本的作者以開源的方式發佈,這樣交易員可以理解和驗證它。請向作者致敬!您可以免費使用它,但在出版物中再次使用這段程式碼將受到網站規則的約束。 您可以收藏它以在圖表上使用。

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