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So I've been looking at XVIX lately and it's actually a pretty interesting product if you understand what it's trying to do. Most people hear VIX and think volatility, but XVIX is playing a totally different game. It's betting on the shape of the VIX futures curve, not on volatility itself.
Here's the core strategy: XVIX goes 100 percent long on midterm VIX futures while shorting short-term ones at 50 percent. We're talking five-month weighted average versus one-month. The index resets daily, so it's constantly repositioning. Basically, it makes money when that curve steepens, when the longer-dated contracts outperform the front month. That's the whole thesis.
I checked the six-month performance numbers when XVIX hit that milestone, and honestly it's mixed. Returns were solid but not spectacular compared to other absolute-return focused products like GTAA or DBV. Where it really shines though is correlation. I ran the numbers against SPY and AGG as market proxies, and XVIX barely moves with equities or bonds. That's the whole point right there. It's uncorrelated to traditional markets.
What really caught my attention was the near-zero correlation with VXX. That matters because it proves XVIX is doing what it claims - profiting off term structure dynamics, not just riding general volatility moves. It's a different beast entirely.
Now the practical stuff: the 0.85 percent fee is reasonable for what you're getting, comparable to similar products in this space. But there are some real considerations. Tax treatment is uncertain since it's an ETN structure, so you could face ordinary income rates instead of long-term capital gains. You've also got counterparty risk with UBS as the issuer. And there's almost no daily volume, so definitely use limit orders if you're getting in.
The bottom line on XVIX is this - if you want portfolio diversification that actually decorrelates from stocks and bonds, it delivers. The correlation profile is genuinely compelling. But the returns haven't been earth-shattering yet, so you're really paying for that diversification benefit and the term structure exposure. It's a specialist tool, not a core holding, but for traders who understand what they're getting into, it fills a specific niche.