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What is the VIX? A beginner's playbook for traders
GO Markets
7/5/2026
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Every time markets get jumpy, a three-letter acronym starts showing up in headlines and trading rooms. The VIX. You will see it called the fear gauge, the fear index, or just "vol." For newer traders, it can feel like an insider's number that everyone seems to track but few stop to explain.

Here is the part many new traders miss. The VIX is not a prediction of where the market will go. It is a reading of how much movement the market expects in the near future. That distinction sounds small. It changes how the number should be used.

This Playbook breaks the VIX down for beginner to light-intermediate traders. Part 1 explains what it is and how it works. Part 2 turns that understanding into a practical, scenario-based process you can use to prepare, observe, and manage risk.

Before you look for a setup

Understand how this market actually behaves first. Use this guide as a starting point, then practise the concepts on charts, watchlists, and demo tools before applying them in live conditions.

Part 01

The 101 explainer

Build a clear, foundational understanding before you do anything else.

The basics

What is the VIX, in plain English

The VIX is the Cboe Volatility Index. It is a real-time index designed to measure the expected volatility of the S&P 500 over the next 30 days. It is calculated from the prices of S&P 500 index options.

Here is a simpler way to picture it. Imagine the options market is a giant insurance market for stocks. When traders are worried, they pay more for protection. When they are calm, that protection gets cheaper. The VIX takes those insurance prices and turns them into a single number.

  • The VIX is not a measure of what has happened. It is a measure of what option markets expect to happen, in terms of magnitude, not direction.
  • The VIX does not tell you whether the S&P 500 will go up or down. It tells you how much movement is being priced in.
  • The VIX is not directly tradable as a stock. Traders gain exposure through related products such as VIX futures, VIX options, and volatility-linked exchange-traded products.
The VIX has spiked during every major market stress event
Approximate monthly closing levels of the Cboe Volatility Index, 2007 to 2024
Illustrative
Source: Stylised representation based on publicly reported Cboe VIX historical data (Cboe Global Markets). Selected month-end values are indicative only and intended for educational illustration. The VIX peak of approximately 82 during March 2020 and the GFC peak above 80 in late 2008 are widely reported. Past performance is not an indication of future performance.
Why It Matters

Why the VIX matters to new traders

Even if you never plan to trade volatility directly, the VIX still matters. It is one of the cleanest reads on market sentiment available, and it tends to move in ways that reflect risk appetite across global markets.

When the VIX rises sharply, it often coincides with falls in equity indices, wider spreads in many CFD markets, and a flight to perceived safer assets such as the US dollar, gold, or government bonds. When the VIX is low and stable, conditions often favour trending behaviour and tighter spreads.

For CFD traders, this matters because leverage can magnify both gains and losses. Volatility is the engine behind both. A market that moves more in a day can offer more opportunity, but it also raises the risk of fast adverse moves, gaps around news, and stop-outs in thin liquidity.

Vocabulary

The key terms to know

You do not need to memorise every piece of options jargon to use the VIX. These are the terms that come up most often.

Implied volatility

The market's expectation of how much an asset will move in the future, derived from option prices. The VIX is built from implied volatility.

Realised volatility

How much the market actually moved over a past period. Useful for comparing expectations against reality.

S&P 500

The benchmark index of around 500 large US companies. The VIX is calculated from options on this index.

Mean reversion

The tendency of a series to return to its long-term average over time. The VIX is widely described as mean-reverting.

Contango

The normal shape of the VIX futures curve, where longer-dated contracts trade higher than the spot VIX. Why it matters: cost can eat into returns over time.

Backwardation

When longer-dated VIX futures trade below spot. Often short and accompanies fast-moving markets where fear is concentrated now.

Risk-on and risk-off

Shorthand for periods when investors are willing to take more risk, or pull back from riskier assets. VIX rises during risk-off.

Spread

The difference between the bid and ask price. Spreads on many CFD markets can widen during high-volatility events.

Liquidity

How easily an asset can be bought or sold without affecting its price. Liquidity tends to thin out around major news, which can amplify moves.

Mechanics

How it works in real market conditions

The VIX is not pulled out of a single price. It is calculated continuously throughout the US trading session from a wide range of S&P 500 index option prices, weighted by how close they are to current levels and how far out their expiries are.

The VIX tends to move inversely to the S&P 500 most of the time. When equities fall, demand for downside protection often rises, which pushes implied volatility higher. The relationship is not mechanical. There are days when both rise or fall together.

The VIX also tends to spike harder than it falls. Volatility can rise quickly when stress hits the system, then ease more gradually as conditions normalise. Up the elevator, down the escalator.

VIX and the S&P 500 typically move in opposite directions

Stylised illustration of the inverse relationship over a 12-month window

Illustrative
Source: Stylised illustration based on publicly available Cboe VIX and S&P 500 (S&P Dow Jones Indices) historical relationships. The depicted inverse correlation is widely documented in academic and industry research, although the strength of the relationship varies across regimes. Educational purposes only.

Most of the time, the VIX sits below 20

Approximate share of daily closes by VIX range, indicative long-run distribution

Illustrative
Source: Stylised distribution based on publicly reported Cboe VIX historical data spanning multiple decades. Buckets and percentages are indicative and intended for educational illustration. Distributions can shift across volatility regimes.
K
Market Intelligence Don’t trade the average. Track the split.

Use GO Markets charts, alerts and watchlists to monitor how the K-shaped consumer theme connects with the VIX.

Explore the big "K"

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