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`50 Cent' Volatility Buyer Is Back With Bet VIX Will Double

Hedges worth $5m spark speculation mystery trader has returned.

`50 Cent' Volatility Buyer Is Back With Bet VIX Will Double
A trader speaks on the telephone while working on the floor of the Philippine Stock Exchange.(Photographer: Taylor Weidman/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- “50 Cent” is back. Or at least, a pretty convincing impersonator who spent $5 million on volatility hedges this week.

The mysterious buyer, or buyers, earned the nickname -- a play on the rapper Curtis Jackson, known as “50 Cent” -- after relentlessly purchasing huge lots of call options tied to the VIX at around 50 cents a pop.

A nearly identical trade was put on over the past two days, likely intended as a hedge, betting that equity-price swings will rip higher with the Cboe Volatility Index sitting below its two-year average.

On Tuesday morning, 50,000 call options with a strike price of 28 were purchased at 50 and 51 cents a piece. Then at 9:50 a.m. in New York on Wednesday, the same trade was made at 49 cents a piece. The options expire in August. The VIX is currently below 13.

`50 Cent' Volatility Buyer Is Back With Bet VIX Will Double

The enigmatic figure had disappeared from the spotlight after a big pay-off in February, when the VIX surged to 37.3 from 17.3 in just one day. The out-of-money options were estimated to have earned $200 million during the volatility explosion.

“He might see it as a good value hedge given the propensity for the VIX to double overnight if there is another ETN-led short squeeze like we saw in February,” said Cathal Hardiman, an institutional trader at IMC Trading BV, which provides liquidity for European volatility derivatives.

A trade war, a hawkish monetary mistake and a crisis in either the emerging markets or euro area were cited as the biggest tail risks in a Bank of America Corp. survey of global equity investors this week. Based on economic fundamentals, the VIX should currently trade at 14.1, according to a Macro Risk Advisors model.

“Either way, him or not, someone somewhere is taking a view for late summer,” said Tim Emmott, executive director at Olivetree Financial Ltd. in London.

To contact the reporters on this story: Sid Verma in London at sverma100@bloomberg.net;Dani Burger in London at dburger7@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Samuel Potter at spotter33@bloomberg.net, Eric J. Weiner

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