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Variance Swap

Posted on October 18, 2025October 20, 2025 by user

Variance swap — overview

A variance swap is an over‑the‑counter derivative that lets two parties exchange payments tied to the realized variance (the square of volatility) of an underlying asset over a specified period. It provides a direct, cash‑settled exposure to how much the asset’s price moves, without taking a directional position in the asset itself.

How it works

  • At contract initiation a fixed strike (often expressed as an annualized variance) and a variance notional are agreed.
  • At maturity the realized variance over the contract period is measured (typically from daily log returns and annualized).
  • The payoff to the long side is:
    variance_notional × (realized_variance − strike_variance).
    If realized variance exceeds the strike, the long receives a cash payment; if it is lower, the long pays.
  • Trades are settled in cash. Margining may occur during the life of the swap if mark‑to‑market exposures breach limits.

Mathematical intuition

  • Variance is the average of squared deviations (roughly the mean of squared log returns). Annualized realized variance is commonly used.
  • Volatility (standard deviation) is the square root of variance. Because variance squares returns, variance swaps amplify the impact of large price moves compared with volatility swaps.

Example: If a contract’s strike variance = 0.04 (implied volatility 20% → 0.20² = 0.04) and realized variance = 0.09 (30% vol → 0.30² = 0.09), the payoff equals variance_notional × (0.09 − 0.04).

Differences from volatility swaps and options

  • Variance vs volatility swap: A variance swap pays based on variance; a volatility swap pays based on volatility (the square root). For the same underlying path, a variance swap’s payout is typically larger and more sensitive to large jumps.
  • Versus options: Options expose traders to both volatility and directional price risk. Replicating a pure variance exposure with options requires a dynamic strip of options and hedging; variance swaps provide a more direct, static exposure without the same delta‑hedging needs. Replication of a variance swap can be approximated with a continuum (strip) of options across strikes.

Typical users

  • Directional traders: speculate on future levels of realized volatility.
  • Spread traders: trade the difference between realized volatility and implied volatility.
  • Hedgers: manage risks from short volatility exposures (e.g., sellers of options).

Risks and considerations

  • Jump risk: Large discrete price moves inflate realized variance disproportionately, producing unexpected payouts.
  • Path dependence and model risk: Measurement method (sampling frequency, treatment of jumps) and assumptions affect payoff.
  • Market and liquidity risk: Variance swaps are OTC instruments and can be less liquid or harder to price than exchange‑traded instruments.
  • Counterparty risk: OTC settlement exposes participants to counterparty default risk (mitigated by collateral agreements).

Practical notes

  • Strike setting: The strike is typically set so that the initial net present value is zero, based on prevailing implied variance.
  • Notionals: Traders specify a variance notional (amount paid per point of variance) rather than a notional on the underlying price.
  • Use cases: Efficient for pure volatility bets or hedges when one wants to avoid directional exposure and repeated hedging complexity.

Key takeaways

  • A variance swap is a cash‑settled contract that pays based on realized variance minus a pre‑set strike.
  • It provides pure volatility exposure, is more sensitive to large price moves than volatility swaps, and avoids the directional and hedging complexities associated with options.
  • Important risks include jump sensitivity, measurement details, liquidity, and counterparty exposure.

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