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Tyro: Did you not read Hillel's description? A SL and TP are placed on each position so that when the price breaks out the hedge is removed. So there are "clearly mapped regions where these win or lose". Now, of course, some dealers will be adding OCO orders to allow the same kind of strategy. But that's still not quite the same as hedging. It's irrelevant if it's the same security or not, as I attempted to explain with my FAS/FAZ, SSO/SDS example. These are funds that are explicitly designed to be inverses of each other - very high negative correlation. So, nobody can say that this type of trading isn't or can't be done in other markets. The one thing people tend forget when discussing this NFA ruling is that instead of simply putting a stop to the dealer practice of charging twice the spread including interest to hold offsetting positions, they decided to change the nature of the market itself. Without any public discussion whatsoever.
"Tell that to anyone who makes money by buying a straddle or strangle." Totally different case - these options traders are buying and selling different securities and there are clearly mapped regions where these win or lose. With the Forex case, you're buying and selling *the same* security, have zero market exposure and aren't hedged so much as absent.
You say: "hedging, in reality, is a fictional move". Tell that to anyone who makes money by buying a straddle or strangle. Or what about the common practice of buying the Long and Inverse ETFs at the same time (FAS/FAZ, SSO/SDS etc..)? It's not "nuts", it's called risk management. This ruling is based on nothing more than the personal beliefs of someone high up in the NFA. It was not made through consensus, consultation or open discussion.
From what I understand, there will be no more hedging allowed in the Forex market.Thanks for reading...
what about hedging on different platform? wil that be allowed?