Lets say your both long and short in the eur/usd. You really do not care which way it goes...
ok....
now you put a 10 pip target (or more, based on time and expected volatility) on each trade and go to sleep....
when you wake up you have 10 pips (or 0 or 20 and meaning your still flat) and the resulting directional trade.
So you automated your system and you did not care about the direction.
Now there are some interesting techniques with grid type set ups using incrementally spaced entries and exits on each side, simply replacing the limit orders at their respective levels as each take profit is realized (anothr thought is pivot point increments or s/r levels)
I find hedging a way to automate....(I am not a programmer)
Michael B.
P.S. Volatilty grabbing has changed the way I trade retail spot forex (remember unrealized P/L, is simply unrealized)
ok....
now you put a 10 pip target (or more, based on time and expected volatility) on each trade and go to sleep....
when you wake up you have 10 pips (or 0 or 20 and meaning your still flat) and the resulting directional trade.
So you automated your system and you did not care about the direction.
Now there are some interesting techniques with grid type set ups using incrementally spaced entries and exits on each side, simply replacing the limit orders at their respective levels as each take profit is realized (anothr thought is pivot point increments or s/r levels)
I find hedging a way to automate....(I am not a programmer)
Michael B.
P.S. Volatilty grabbing has changed the way I trade retail spot forex (remember unrealized P/L, is simply unrealized)
Quote from WarEagle:
Hedging... I have been meaning to ask someone about this so when I saw this discussion I figured I would get this straightened out.
I just don't understand how being hedged is any different than being flat. Someone mentioned a benefit of only putting up margin for one position...being flat requires no margin. Someone else mentioned it lets you stay market neutral until the direction of the market becomes more clear...so does being flat. The math for a hedge is the same as being flat...what am I missing here? It seems to me like the only difference is that you would have to pay the spread twice instead of only once.
