The relative entropy between two quantum states is given by $D(\rho\|\sigma) = \operatorname{Tr}(\rho\log\rho -\rho\log\sigma)$. It is known that for any bipartite state $\rho_{AB}$ with reduced states $\rho_A$ and $\rho_B$, it holds that

$$D(\rho_{AB}\|\rho_A\otimes\rho_B)\leq D(\rho_{AB}\|\rho_A\otimes\omega_B)$$

for all choices of $\omega_B$. This can be seen by expanding both sides and noting that the relative entropy is nonnegative. Now define the relative entropy variance (see [this reference][1], page 3)

$$V(\rho \| \sigma):=\operatorname{Tr} [\rho(\log \rho-\log \sigma-D(\rho \| \sigma))^{2}]$$

Does this also satisfy a similar property i.e.

$$V(\rho_{AB}\|\rho_A\otimes\rho_B) \leq V(\rho_{AB}\|\rho_A\otimes\sigma_B)$$ 

for all $\sigma_B$? 

EDIT: It seems like the last inequality is not true. But the name variance is suggestive so perhaps there is a non trivial lower bound for $V(\rho_{AB}\|\rho_A\otimes\sigma_B)$ using $V(\rho_{AB}\|\rho_A\otimes\rho_B)$?


  [1]: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1208.1478.pdf