The CME Group Volatility Index (CVOL) delivers the first ever cross-asset class family of implied volatility indices based on simple variance. Using our proprietary simple variance methodology that assigns equal weighting to strikes across the entire implied volatility curve, the CVOL Index produces a more representative measure of the market’s expectation of 30-day forward risk. The CVOL Indices and related derivative indicators are published daily via CME DataMine.
For each product, the following CVOL indexes and indicators will be published:
- CVOL Index, the primary Implied Volatility Index
- Up Variance (“UpVar”)
- Down Variance (“DnVar”)
- Skew
- ATM
- Convexity
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Products Available
The set of CVOL index products are:
CVOL Index | CVOL Code | Asset Class |
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G5 FX CVOL Index | FXVL | FX |
EUR/USD CVOL Index | EUVL | FX |
GBP/USD CVOL Index | GBVL | FX |
JPY/USD CVOL Index | JPVL | FX |
AUD/USD CVOL Index | ADVL | FX |
CAD/USD CVOL Index | CAVL | FX |
MXN/USD CVOL Index | MPVL | FX |
CHF/USD CVOL Index | CHVL | FX |
Treasury Price CVOL Index | TPVL | Interest Rate |
Treasury Yield CVOL Index | TVL | Interest Rate |
2-Year Treasury CVOL Index (Price Volatility) | TUVL | Interest Rate |
2-Year Treasury CVOL Index (Yield Volatility) | TUVY | Interest Rate |
5-Year Treasury CVOL Index (Price Volatility) | FVVL | Interest Rate |
5-Year Treasury CVOL Index (Yield Volatility) | FVVY | Interest Rate |
10-Year T-Note Futures (Price Volatility) | TYVL | Interest Rate |
10-Year T-Note Futures (Yield Volatility) | TYVY | Interest Rate |
30-Year Treasury CVOL Index (Price Volatility) | USVL | Interest Rate |
30-Year Treasury CVOL Index (Yield Volatility) | USVY | Interest Rate |
SOFR CVOL Index | SRVL | Interest Rate |
SOFR 1Y Mid-Curve CVOL Index | S1VL | Interest Rate |
SOFR 2Y Mid-Curve CVOL Index | S2VL | Interest Rate |
Metals CVOL Index | MVL | Metals |
Silver CVOL Index | SIVL | Metals |
Gold CVOL Index | GCVL | Metals |
Copper CVOL Index | HGVL | Metals |
Aluminum CVOL Index | ALVL | Metals |
Platinum CVOL Index | POVL | Metals |
Energy CVOL Index | EVL | Energy |
WTI Crude Oil CVOL Index | CLVL | Energy |
Henry Hub Natural Gas CVOL Index | NGVL | Energy |
RBOB Gasoline CVOL Index | RBVL | Energy |
NY Harbor ULSD CVOL Index | HOVL | Energy |
Agriculture CVOL Index | AVL | Ags |
Wheat CVOL Index | WVL | Ags |
Corn CVOL Index | CVL | Ags |
Soybean CVOL Index | SVL | Ags |
Soybean Oil CVOL Index | SOVL | Ags |
Soybean Meal CVOL Index | SMVL | Ags |
Lean Hogs CVOL Index | HEVL | Ags |
Live Cattle CVOL Index | LEVL | Ags |
Class III Milk CVOL Index | DCVL | Ags |
Feeder Cattle CVOL Index | GFVL | Ags |
Commodity CVOL Index | CMVL | Metals, Energy, Ags |
**CVOL indexes will also be coming soon for other CME Group benchmark products.
Dates Available
Up to nine years of history are available to license for each CVOL End of Day index through CME Group DataMine.
CVOL: Indexes and Indicators
How do the CVOL Indexes work?
CVOL indexes measure the expected risk or implied volatility of an underlying future based on the information contained in the prices of options on that underlying future. In general, the expectation has a 30-day forward-looking horizon. The metric is an annualized standard deviation as used in typical option pricing models. The index family also includes metrics predicated on just Out-of-the-Money (OTM) Calls and Out-of-the-Money OTM Puts, ‘UpVar’ and ‘DnVar’, respectively, which are holistically consistent with the metric generated by using both the Calls and the Puts together. These related indexes provide insight into the direction that the collective market-place is expecting greater risk.
What is Simple Variance?
Simple variance, also known as Gaussian Variance, is the square of the standard deviation of a normally distributed population. Simple variance allows for the underlying asset or futures prices to be negative, such as interest rates, or even commodities, such as oil.
This characteristic of Simple Variance distinguishes itself from Log Variance. Log Variance, or the assumption that the underlying asset or future will exhibit a Log Normal distribution, does not allow for prices below zero. In fact, Log Variance swaps, which have been the most commonly employed variance swaps in the market-place for several decades, will have an infinite value if an asset actual priced at zero. Other volatility indexes that use all the option prices from a specific tenor often attempt to build a replicating portfolio of that potentially infinite payoff. This renders those Log Variance metrics as being not very “simple.”
CVOL indices are generated using Simple, or Gaussian Variance, as the base to provide a consistent and tractable metric that can be compared across different individual products for a given asset class, and additionally across asset classes themselves.
What is UpVar?
Up Variance or UpVar is a metric that employs the same method for estimating the Standard Deviation as Simple Variance, but specifically uses only OTM Calls in the calculation. The variance estimate is then doubled or mirrored in order to provide an apples-to-apples analogue to the two-sided set of options used in the regular calculation. The UpVar indicator provides a value that isolates only the call wing and so reflects just th.
What is DownVar?
Down Variance or DnVar, like Up Variance, employs the same method for estimating the Standard Deviation as Simple Variance, but uses only OTM Puts in the calculation. Similarly, the variance estimate is then doubled or mirrored in order to provide an apples-to-apples analogue to the two-sided set of options used in the regular calculation.
What is Skew?
Skew compares the Up Variance and Down Variance numbers to provide insight into how much implied volatility is priced into Calls compared to Puts. Two Skew numbers are provided, one showing the difference between the two (UpVar – DnVar), such that negative values indicate that the implied volatility is collectively higher for Puts than for Calls. The other Skew metric is the ratio of the two calculated by dividing the UpVar by the DnVar. In this case, if the Puts had collectively higher implied volatility, the resulting measurement would be less than 1.0.
What is ATM?
The ‘at-the-money’ (ATM) indicator is the implied volatility of an option that has a strike exactly equal to the futures price. If the futures price happens to be exactly equal to an existing strike that is used in the CVOL calculation, that price is transformed into an implied volatility number using a closed-form formula. (Brenner-Subramaniam). If the futures price is between existing strikes, a synthetic ATM price is generated for that price using the closest existing option price and an assumption of 50 delta multiplied by the difference between that closest strike and the futures price.
What is Convexity?
The convexity indictor is the ratio of the CVOL metric to the ‘at-the-money’ (ATM) indicator. It is intended to provide a measure of the volatility “smile” that results from OTM options having individual implied volatilities that are successively greater.
FAQ
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What format is the file delivered in? Data is provided in .csv format (comma separated values). Are files compressed? No, the files are not compressed into zip files. Where can I find additional information about CVOL Indexes? We have several resources you can access to learn more about the CVOL Indexes: CME Group Benchmark Administration What is Live Streaming CVOL? The live streaming CVOL Indexes calculate every 15 seconds from real-time options and futures markets during trading sessions. It utilizes the same simple variance methodology with additional logic to manage momentary quoting deviations that may occur. |
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What CVOL data is available on CME DataMine? In addition to the primary implied volatility, CVOL index, there are five other accompanying indicators which will price specific properties of the underlying asset’s expected future risk, as reflected by its options prices. The five additional indicators are; ‘UpVariance’ or ‘UpVar,’ ‘DownVariance’ or ‘DnVar,’ At-the-money Volatility or 'ATM,' Convexity or 'Conv,' and Skew. How many files are available per day? 1 file per day per CVOL Index you are subscribed to. How far back do you maintain these records? 2 years to start from the 11/2/2020 launch date Do you have sample files available? Yes, see Sample Files section above. Are there any anomalies in the the data? There are no known anomalies. Will CVOL Indexes be available for licensing? CME will offer a variety of direct licensing options including redistribution, historical usage, derived usage, and other common customer data licensing needs. Please contact CME Data Sales to discuss your specific licensing needs. CMEDataSales@CMEGroup.com |
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What time of day are CVOL Indexes available? Each official daily index fixing and each indicator fixing will be published same-day, after initial settlement files have been published. When will CVOL Indexes be offered as real time indexes? CME has real time indexes for 44 of the 46 CVOL indices, with history available back to August 8, 2022.
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What is the calculation methodology for CVOL Indexes? CVOL indexes use the option prices from one or two tenors (expirations) of options in order to generate a time weighted average that centers on 30 days. Each of the two tenors has its own variance metric which uses the actual option prices to estimate the area under the curve of expected market outcomes for that tenor. Each option price is multiplied by the average distance to the two adjacent strikes to create an area under the outcome curve. The lower the option price (with the same width to the nearest strikes), the less probability of the underlying future’s price ending up in that price range if the slice or section’s area is divided by the sum of all the areas across the range of possible outcomes. The sum of all of these areas is therefore meant to represent the expected variance of the underlying future’s price. By annualizing and taking the square root of the variance measurement, a standard, normal volatility number, as generally understood in the market-place parlance, is produced. By time-weighting the variances to a target of 30 days (prior to taking the square root) a 30-day expected variance is generated. That 30-day variance is then annualized and square-rooted to produce a 30-day forward looking volatility estimate for the underlying future. What is the average file size? The average file size is approximately 2KB to 7KB Are there any anomalies in the files? There are no known anomalies. Which CME Group products will have their own CVOL Index and indicators? Initially, the CVOL Indexes on the 10yr Treasury Note Future and 5 major currency pairs will be published. The methodology has been found to work across other option complexes at CME, and so it our intention to have a suite or family of indices that uses a completely consistent methodology across all CME, CBOT, NYMEX and COMEX products that have robust options markets. CVOL indexes and indicators on our additional benchmark products are coming soon, and will be published over the next several months. How is the data structured? CVOL File Schema (Futures)
Index File Schema
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