GLOSSARY

market volatility

Market volatility is the rate and magnitude of price changes in a security or market index. It’s the variable most likely to drive a client to call their advisor in a panic. For investment professionals and RIAs, knowing how to define, measure, and explain it clearly is a key part of the job.

This article covers what market volatility is, how it’s measured, what causes it, and how the top advisors manage it. Read on for the full breakdown or skip to the bottom for the latest news.

What is market volatility?

Market volatility is the degree of variability in the returns of a security or market index over time. It’s most often calculated as the standard deviation of those returns, multiplied by the square root of the number of periods being measured.

High volatility means larger, more frequent, and often unpredictable price swings. Low volatility, meanwhile, means prices move in a more orderly and gradual way.

Volatility also reflects uncertainty. When investor confidence is high, prices move in tight and predictable ranges. However, when investors face economic surprises, policy shifts, or geopolitical shocks, prices swing sharply in either direction.

Market volatility isn’t the same as risk

Many professionals use the two terms interchangeably, but they describe different concepts. Risk is the chance of experiencing a loss. Volatility describes how much and how quickly prices move.

Higher volatility raises the probability that risk materializes, but the two concepts aren’t interchangeable. Treating them as the same thing is one of the most common mistakes in client conversations.

Volatility also tends to mean-revert. Sharp spikes ease over time, and quiet periods give way to bigger swings, with both pulling back toward a long-term average.

Morgan Stanley Investment Management’s Rui de Figueiredo breaks down how he thinks about portfolio, liquidity, and volatility risk in this InvestmentNews video.

For a closer look at how leading firms position client portfolios through these cycles, check out our special report on the top RIA firms in the US.

How do you measure market volatility?

Advisors rely on three main measures to gauge market volatility. Each is tied to a different time horizon. Some look backward at what has already happened. Others look forward to what the market expects. A fourth measure focuses on how a single stock moves relative to the broader index.

Each measure tells advisors something different about market conditions:

  • Historical volatility: A backward-looking calculation that uses the standard deviation of past returns, typically measured over 10 to 180 trading days. Sometimes called statistical volatility, it tells advisors how bumpy the recent ride has been
  • Implied volatility: A forward-looking measure derived directly from options prices. It reflects the market’s collective expectation for future price movements. Rising implied volatility means investors are bidding up the cost of protection
  • The VIX: The CBOE Volatility Index, often called the “fear gauge.” It measures the 30-day expected volatility of the S&P 500 based on real-time S&P 500 option prices. Readings of 0 to 15 signal complacency, 15 to 25 are normal, 25 to 30 mark rising stress, and above 30 indicates high stress

A fourth measure matters when the focus shifts to individual stocks. Beta tracks a stock’s volatility relative to the broader market, with the S&P 500 assigned a value of 1.0.

A stock with a beta of 1.45 has historically moved 145 percent for every 100 percent move in the index. A stock with a beta of 0.78 has moved less than the underlying index. Growth stocks typically carry higher betas than value stocks.

These measures often inform the asset-allocation choices that drive client portfolios, including the shift toward private markets as volatility rattles public portfolios.

Visit and bookmark our equities news section for ongoing market coverage as conditions shift.

What causes market volatility?

Market volatility comes from investor uncertainty about the future. Four main categories drive it:

  • economic data and monetary policy: inflation readings, GDP prints, jobs data, and Federal Reserve interest-rate decisions; investors recalibrating their expectations against these prints cause sharp moves
  • geopolitical and policy events: elections, trade-policy shifts, sanctions, tariffs, and military conflict; the tariff announcements that triggered the Q1 2026 equity exodus are a recent example
  • corporate and sector developments: earnings surprises, guidance cuts, sector-specific shocks like oil price swings or AI-driven disruption of software lending, and company-specific news for large index constituents
  • natural and systemic events: pandemics, natural disasters, financial-system stress, and credit-market disruptions like the gating of private credit funds earlier this year

These categories aren’t new, but the speed at which they hit prices is. Hyperconnected investors, 24-hour news cycles, and algorithmic trading now turn minor catalysts into larger price moves. This is why so many clients are asking advisors to headline-proof their portfolios.

Why market volatility matters for advisors and clients

Market volatility shapes nearly every decision advisors make for clients, from asset allocation through to product selection. It works on the portfolio in four practical ways:

1. It defines portfolio risk

Volatility is the standard measure for quantifying how much a portfolio can swing. Building portfolios around a client’s tolerance for volatility, and not just their tolerance for loss, is what separates suitable allocations from unsuitable ones.

2. It drives options and derivatives pricing

Higher volatility raises options premiums because larger price moves increase the chance an option finishes in the money. Advisors using protective puts, collars, or buffer ETFs need to factor implied volatility into hedge costs.

3. It shapes diversification math

Combining assets with different volatility profiles and low correlation produces more stable portfolio-level returns. This is why a multi-asset portfolio can be less volatile than any single asset class within it.

4. It signals investor sentiment

Rising volatility often points to fear, while falling volatility can point to either stability or complacency. Advisors watch the Cboe VIX as one indicator in client conversations and tactical decisions.

Managing client portfolios through volatility is where the advisor’s value shows up most clearly. Every channel above feeds into that single point.

Market volatility by the numbers

Clients respond to specifics. A handful of historical data give advisors the perspective to push back against panic-driven decisions:

  • 5 percent pullbacks are normal: Since 1980, the S&P 500 has experienced an intra-year drop of 5 percent or more in 93 percent of calendar years
  • Annual returns have still been positive: Over the same period, the index’s average calendar-year return has been more than 13 percent
  • Corrections are short: A correction, generally a 10 percent decline from recent highs, has lasted an average of 115 days
  • Bear markets are longer but finite: A bear market, a decline of at least 20 percent, has averaged 19 months
  • Recoveries tend to be strong: In the 12 months after the market bottomed during a recession, the S&P 500’s total return has averaged 38 percent

These numbers carry the “stay invested” conversation every advisor has during sell-offs. They also explain why client perceptions of market volatility often diverge from what investors actually know about risk amid market volatility.

Wilshire’s Nate Palmer explains how plan sponsors are positioning around exactly this InvestmentNews video:

How can advisors help clients through market volatility?

Advisors help clients navigate market volatility through proactive communication, behavioral coaching, and concrete portfolio actions. The most effective advisors group clients by situation and reconnect them with long-term goals. They also use volatility for rebalancing, tax-loss harvesting, and risk repositioning.

Here are some practices that the top advisors rely on:

1. Lead with communication, not numbers

Overcommunication is the single most important principle of volatility management. Proactive outreach, including virtual client webinars, scheduled one-on-one meetings, and segmented client emails, outperforms reacting to inbound panic calls.

2. Segment clients by situation

Working clients still contributing to retirement accounts benefit from a quick reminder that lower prices favor them. Retired clients need a different opening question. “Has your income been affected?” The honest answer is almost always no, which pulls the conversation away from headlines.

3. Reframe the goal as avoiding catastrophe, rather than avoiding loss

A 10 percent drawdown is uncomfortable but recoverable. Abandoning a long-term strategy at the bottom often isn’t. Walking clients through prior drawdowns like 2008, March 2020, and the 2022 bond rout helps them recognize their own behavior cycles before they repeat them.

4. Use volatility as a planning trigger

Market volatility creates planning opportunities advisors should act on. Rebalancing, tax-loss harvesting, Roth conversions, and transitioning taxable accounts to tax-managed structures all become more valuable when valuations reset. The principle is simple: reposition, don’t abandon.

Behavioral biases like recency bias and herding behavior tend to peak exactly when an advisor’s steadying presence matters most. The behavioral coaching that follows is, per FINRA and most of the major behavioral-finance research, where the relationship earns its fees.

Where advisor value shows up in volatile markets

Market volatility is normal, mean-reverting, and historically followed by recovery. It’s measured through historical returns, options-implied expectations, and indexes like the VIX.

An advisor’s value to clients shows up most clearly when volatility spikes. The job isn’t to predict the next move but to keep clients on their plan, reposition portfolios where it makes sense, and turn fear into the planning conversations clients remember.

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