Hedging

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One of the things that still confuses me is Hedging. I don't know if it's a legitimate or a known strategy in Forex trading but I've seen and read about it in some Forex articles.

Can anyone explain what "Forex Hedging" is? If it is forbidden or a legitimate strategy?
 
In retail forex parlance, "hedging" is holding opposing long and short positions in the same pair at the same time. Of course, if you try to tell professionals that's hedging they'll laugh you right out of the room because what you really have when you hold opposing positions like that is no position at all. You're net flat and can neither make nor lose any money so long as both sides of the trade are on. It's basically an accounting variation where the broker doesn't net out your positions. In the US it is against regulations. There is no economic benefit to be had by "hedging".
 
In retail forex parlance, "hedging" is holding opposing long and short positions in the same pair at the same time. Of course, if you try to tell professionals that's hedging they'll laugh you right out of the room because what you really have when you hold opposing positions like that is no position at all. You're net flat and can neither make nor lose any money so long as both sides of the trade are on. It's basically an accounting variation where the broker doesn't net out your positions. In the US it is against regulations. There is no economic benefit to be had by "hedging".

I read this again and again on forums and it is innacurate.
First there is the assumption of how the trader is trading and that they know where the market will turn, then there is the assumption that they are holding equal short and long positions and are net flat. Neither need be true. And thirdly, there is a very real benefit from trading in that way if you're not an all in all out trader and are planning for holding for some time.
But yes, it isn't hedging at all, it's gaining position and offsetting risk and by that I DO NOT mean attempting to hide losses by trading the opposite way instead of closing. There is NO mathematical benefit to be gained by doing it but there is a positional one.
 
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I read this again and again on forums and it is innacurate.
First there is the assumption of how the trader is trading and that they know where the market will turn, then there is the assumption that they are holding equal short and long positions and are net flat. Neither need be true. And thirdly, there is a very real benefit from trading in that way if you're not an all in all out trader and are planning for holding for some time.

I'm pretty certain that you can synthesise any type of hedged position simply out of unidirectional orders. In almost every case that I've looked at, I was able to synthesis those positions with a reduction in spread.

You are either neautral, or net long, or net short. Having 10 lots long and 9 lots short is the equivelant as having 1 lot long etc.
 
I'm pretty certain that you can synthesise any type of hedged position simply out of unidirectional orders. In almost every case that I've looked at, I was able to synthesis those positions with a reduction in spread.

You are either neautral, or net long, or net short. Having 10 lots long and 9 lots short is the equivelant as having 1 lot long etc.

Absolutely correct and by 'hedging' you lose out on swap and spread too but the big but is position which the maths never takes into account.

If your intention is to hold something for a LONG TIME i.e. months, the optimum time to enter is at a high/low - monthly or yearly you've got to get in at a place where price eventually never comes back. There is only one of these and you do not know when it will happen.

It's not feasable to position trade on a monthly chart only - massive stops and how long is it going to take to make a few quid? Likely you'll be entering on 4hr or daily charts at high/low extremes. Look at any timeframe chart and you'll see how FX markets tend to move, the swings back and forth taking out most entries. Now if you are intending to hold for a very long time it does not make sense to open close open opposite direction close etc because once the market starts a long term trend you will NEVER get back in at the best price. Very often when a simple ABCD kind of graph is used to show how 'hedging' is a waste of time always assume both methods closing at D. Losses are not taken into account either but assume none either way. With in/out you will close at D and then look to re-enter. With the other mindset you will not, you're looking to hold it indefinitely.

I know the arguments re widening of spread and margin. This is another of those 'perspective things'. You're not going to be trading monthly charts with massive leverage and the only time spread widening will be a real worry is if it's very close to an entry.

This is a dumb example and I'm doing it in words when pictures would be better but say you trade off the 4hr chart and currently have a four part position short from a new yearly high. During the time you established this position a bearish outside bar formed on the weekly chart. Now, an opportunity for a long appears on the 4hr chart (trend is long after all and you pretty much know that given this 'signal' the fade is about to start, there's obviously resistance up above but you DO NOT know if it will hold), you take it. At the same time you close one of the shorts (an all in all out trader would have closed the lot) as it's far enough in profit to warrant closing. By doing so you also move your position further away from the market. Price comes back up near the entry of that short and spikes it, pulls back and shows another long entry, you enter another long and close a short. Price moves up a bit then moves back down, knocking out long number two for break even, again it comes up, then goes back down again. You choose to close the first long for a tiny profit. Price consolidates then trends south for 6 months. You got 2 trades on at the best price and probably further ones on the way down at optimum levels.
You'd still be taking longs and shorts on the way down, whichever start getting knocked out is the way price is going. Just typical trend trading. A killer would be not keeping out of ranging markets as for any trend following strat.


Now if it had gone the other way you'd still have had one or two longs on and let the market take the shorts out.

To my mind it's a long term trading strategy for gaining market position but yes pretty useless for any kind of short term trading. You've got to let the first positions in a leg ride with the idea of not closing them for a very long time to make it worthwhile.
 
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hey all

heres a simple system trading above and below the 50 sma on 2 different timeframes

G/U as example

clearly the $$ per pip we allocate are vastly different in value and gearing , but in principle the tiny losses being experienced in the 4h chart are providing a nice little sell trade on the 5 min

so is this hedging - or just trading same strategy on 2 different timeframes that happen to be contrarian at present ?

N
 

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I'm pretty certain that you can synthesise any type of hedged position simply out of unidirectional orders. In almost every case that I've looked at, I was able to synthesis those positions with a reduction in spread.

You are either neautral, or net long, or net short. Having 10 lots long and 9 lots short is the equivelant as having 1 lot long etc.

What if you're trying to stay flat overall but profit from short term vol?
 
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To my mind it's a long term trading strategy for gaining market position but yes pretty useless for any kind of short term trading. You've got to let the first positions in a leg ride with the idea of not closing them for a very long time to make it worthwhile.

So basically, you hold out a position which you bought for a price that will never come back and sell it 3 or 5 months later? This is also given that you KNOW how the market will move. Did I get that right?

Also, hedging doesn't apply to short term trades?
 
hey all

heres a simple system trading above and below the 50 sma on 2 different timeframes

G/U as example

clearly the $$ per pip we allocate are vastly different in value and gearing , but in principle the tiny losses being experienced in the 4h chart are providing a nice little sell trade on the 5 min

so is this hedging - or just trading same strategy on 2 different timeframes that happen to be contrarian at present ?

N

Thanks for the visuals but one thing confuses me, I thought it was a basic premise that you sell high and buy low? Or did you mixed that up?
 
I checked youtube for any tutorials on hedging and found an interesting one:


And this one too:


Am I right in saying that hedging is not only allowed in the US? Tell me what you guys think.
 
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So basically, you hold out a position which you bought for a price that will never come back and sell it 3 or 5 months later? This is also given that you KNOW how the market will move. Did I get that right?

Also, hedging doesn't apply to short term trades?

Well, firstly as already mentioned, it isn't hedging.

You DON'T know anything. That's the point.

It's a tool that's there (though no longer in the US) that can be used or not. Its reason for existence probably twofold. One is that when used short term it makes brokers more money and two some traders found that during high volatility news times that exit orders were being honoured more than entry orders so asked brokers to implement it. Brokers seeing there was more money to be made, went ahead and implemented it.

I was just talking about another way of using them that could actually be of benefit, workable and useable (yes it does 'work'). There are dangers with it the same as anything else. Did I hear anyone shout 'margin call'?

You don't KNOW if price will come back to the entry or not but the further away from the market the position is the more chance it has of surviving. In the example I gave if the trader entered short, closed, entered long then entered short again the short position is very close to the market therefore has less chance of surviving. The more you look at the FX markets the more you'll understand this. + from how that person is trading they'll close the second short again anyway. For the position trader, if it comes back to position then, hey, guess what, there is a long position being built anyway.

There's another reason for doing it as one of the charts posted shows. Look at USDCHF monthly as an example. Assume you've got a nice short position established you've been holding for some time and are WELL in profit. Price does not trend in straight lines. Even though it's going down on the monthly it could trend up for weeks in the interim. Are you going to close your shorts because of this? TBH if you closed them ALL, unless you needed the money out for some reason you'd be nuts to do it as your position is likely so far from current price as to as safe as it can reasonably be. First you need to know how close your average price is to current market price, if it's close then you'd think about closing out part position of a near-term down leg that's very close to the market. This will also give you the capital to enter long for the up-leg, also of psychological importance you're booking some profits and making your unrealised draw-down smaller (you'll always get this as you have more trades short then long, market is coming up, you have draw-down whether you realise it or not). If the up leg fails, it fails. If it trends up for a few weeks you start adding longs until it the market starts showing shorting opportunities, again noting average price etc for the long leg. If the first of the new longs start surviving for more than a month or so and you see a price formation on the monthly chart 'signalling' a possible trend change' then it's perhaps time to close out some 'nearer to' short legs altogether.

The whole point I guess of trading in that way is that you DO NOT know. It's hard enough trying to fathom where the market is going to go within the next half an hour, never mind the next 12 months...but you don't need to.


Purely mathematically 'hedging' is not the optimum way to trade but the maths does not take position, building position and length of hold into account. It also does not take into account the high probability that the in and out trader will NOT be capturing every pip of each swing and that by the nature of that type of trading s\he will likely be trying to enter more often and getting stopped out more often. Imagine for a moment the in and out trader who is entering for the second time on that short, has a stop reasonably close to. It gets spiked out for a loss. The trader actually loses out twice, firstly loss of capital and also missing out on the down move. Now the trader who already had the short established from before need not actually have a stop in the market at all when establishing the next part of the position short, shock horror. The trader will know where the average price is (further away from the market than the other trader's stop) and need not close out unless prices closes beyond average price, the resulting spike does not take the trader out of the market as price did not close beyond average price.

All I'd add is that all the optimum stuff etc as far as a retail discretionary trader is concerned is not necc. the way to go at all. Nothing is optimum, the markets are infinitely variable, the only constant can be you, all the R:R stuff and everything else, it's all just theory. All that matters at the end of the day is making money, it doesn't matter if it's not the 'optimum' way of doing it.

I can think of a few more reasons but it's 9AM and I need coffee. I think all I'd add is that on nearly every forum you can find almost everyone will scoff at because of the maths but then you have to remember that supposedly 95% or retail traders fail and 95% of the people doing the scoffing will be failing also...

For short term trading using it in the way I've described isn't going to be so useful. Why? Again because of the maths. With long term trading things like spread for instance tend to 0 whereas short term they are a big deal and you've just doubled your costs.


My posts are getting so long I'm going to change my name by deed poll and call myself JoeTraderR7. Need to get some more names in there though. Does it make sense? I'm not going to read it. What a load of old @rse dribble.

Bill has been holding a short on Swissy for some time. his friend Mathilda, after making himn a lovely cup of ground coffee suggests he starts building a long position because the fast TCD has crossed over the slow TCD on the 1 minute chart...
 
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@nunrgguy: Ok, point well taken. I do, of course agree that no one knows where the market is going and if prices will go back to its original position.

So, I would just treat hedging as a tool, and not entirely as a strategy to make trade profits. Well, that's how I understand it anyway.
 
Purely mathematically 'hedging' is not the optimum way to trade but the maths does not take position, building position and length of hold into account.

Ummm...Since your P&L is strictly determined by the math, how does that not take into account position, etc.?

What is sounds like you're talking about is trading around a long-term position and "hedging" in this fashion is still no different than closing all or part of the trade. Actually, it could be worse off because you're probably in a negative carry situation when you're "hedged", which will not be the case when you've closed instead.
 
Ummm...Since your P&L is strictly determined by the math, how does that not take into account position, etc.?

What is sounds like you're talking about is trading around a long-term position and "hedging" in this fashion is still no different than closing all or part of the trade. Actually, it could be worse off because you're probably in a negative carry situation when you're "hedged", which will not be the case when you've closed instead.


Yes absolutely. I concur. Simple maths based purely on theoretical P&L WILL show that.
Simple maths will also likely show that proper hedging is mostly a waste of time.

However, simple maths do not take into account entry risk, trader psychology, where your average price is, that the short term trader will cut winners too soon, and that the long term trader will hold hold hold. All the maths looks at is theoretical P&L after a series of trades.

Put it another way, you've been holding a short for 14 months, price is now at the yearly low. You got in at the high and your average price is 50% of the move away behind major monthly resistance. Another 1/4 of the way down is another major weekly resistance which as yet has not been tested. It is likely to be. What's your reason to close your current short?

However, on the 4HR chart there's a long opportunity, this could be the start of just a daily trend, a weekly trend a monthly trend, or just chop, it's probably going to go up to test the weekly resistance but ultimately you do not know. If it goes up, will that resistance hold or fail? You do not know. But on the basis of a 4HR move are you going to close your 14 month short? Or are you going to start adding longs and see what happens?

Now if you have short legs nearer to and they start getting knocked out as you enter longs there's a chance the major trend is changing, time to exit at least nearby shorts to move your position further away, you've now also got longs on at the best price.

The alternative? Stay 100% short until you see a major trend change (how big a draw-down before it's obvious plus you do not get back in at the best, most survivable levels?) Or get out after momentum (always a good strategy on shorter TFs) but you won't stay in the major trend for the long hold doing that.

Looking purely at P&L does not take your market position into account and how survivable a position is. Re-entering places your position right next to current price and more likely to get taken out.

All I'm saying really is that it can be a way into the major S/R game from smaller levels and it is a valid strategy. It's not mathematically optimum but then again no-one and I mean no-one is able to trade optimally anyway so it's a moot point.

You start building positions based on smaller TF charts, when a change of trend looks likely you close out the bulk of the position apart from the outliers and take the opposite trade. If the outliers get taken out (and they've previously already been tested), looks like a trend change. If they hold the trend is holding, you're in at the best price for a long term hold with small TF entry risk.
 
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Your first couple of entries are around 1.6. Price falls from here and trends for 3 years. Can you re-enter at 1.6?

Who cares? It makes no matter whatsoever where you re-enter relative to where you first entered.

For example, you get long at 1.60 and the market moves to 1.8. You think there's going to be a pull-back, so you close or reduce the trade. You've locked in that 0.2 gain on the portion of the trade you took off (or "hedged"). If the market dips to 1.7 and you re-enter, from the big picture P&L perspective when considering the whole span of the long-term move you're playing it would be like you're now long from below 1.6 (potentially down to 1.5 depending on how much of your position your took off/offset).

Being fixated on your entry point is a certain kind of psychological bias, though I'm blanking on what it's called at the moment. Where you got in shouldn't have any impact on your future decisions (aside from the P&L impact on the potential size of trades you can do).
 
Who cares? It makes no matter whatsoever where you re-enter relative to where you first entered.

For example, you get long at 1.60 and the market moves to 1.8. You think there's going to be a pull-back, so you close or reduce the trade. You've locked in that 0.2 gain on the portion of the trade you took off (or "hedged"). If the market dips to 1.7 and you re-enter, from the big picture P&L perspective when considering the whole span of the long-term move you're playing it would be like you're now long from below 1.6 (potentially down to 1.5 depending on how much of your position your took off/offset).

Being fixated on your entry point is a certain kind of psychological bias, though I'm blanking on what it's called at the moment. Where you got in shouldn't have any impact on your future decisions (aside from the P&L impact on the potential size of trades you can do).
:LOL: Ya got me b4 I finished editing
 
However, simple maths do not take into account entry risk, trader psychology, where your average price is, that the short term trader will cut winners too soon, and that the long term trader will hold hold hold. All the maths looks at is theoretical P&L after a series of trades.

I will readily admit there's a psychology aspect to "hedging" that some folks might find valuable (which is why I used the term "economic" when I said no benefit previously). I would, however, contend that it's a crutch which has the very real potential to limit trader development in two ways.

On the one hand, some traders use "hedging" in a way which allows them to deny the reality of taking a loss. Until they learn how to handle the losses in a healthy fashion they'll never get anywhere.

On the other hand, the way "hedging" muddles the accounting for decisions it makes traders fail to realize that it's their decision where they buy and sell that determines their success, not the fact that they "hedge". I've had people swear up and down that "hedging" made them more profitable. It's complete garbage, of course. "Hedging" is merely an accounting variation and thus can't make you more profitable. It masks the fact that the trader improved their buy/sell decisions, which it strikes me as being a good thing to recognize for their confidence and development.

Now, as for your long-term/short-term example, I have no real issue with how you want to account for it. "Hedge" accounting can be useful in a situation like that to help guage the effectiveness of the decisions you make in the different timeframes - so long as you don't delude yourself into believing that putting on a short-term position counter to your longer-term one is in any functional way different than reducing your longer-term position by the same amount. It has the exact same P&L implications and the exact same risk characteristics.
 
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Whoa, this is getting interesting but I'm getting confused. Anyway, I'd just leave hedging now as it is obviously not for beginners. Thanks for the input guys.
 
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