Hedging against random flash crashes

most of my trades are intraday with stops no more than $0.5 away usually less. I'm assuming they would be filled first even in the event of a crash way before it got to 5-10% down.
You can't assume anything. In a news event your stops may be triggered when price is far away from your stop. That's why stops are not very effective (as protection) and oftentimes it's just better to either wait or try to work out of position.
This is just part of trading.
 
You can't assume anything. In a news event your stops may be triggered when price is far away from your stop. That's why stops are not very effective (as protection) and oftentimes it's just better to either wait or try to work out of position.
This is just part of trading.
I'm not talking about news events as such, the price move is never as dramatic as a flash crash of 10% +. That's 30% on a margined account. I can't see anyone waiting that out easily...

Less margin is an option or always trade 2 stocks (1 long 1 short).
 
Been through 911, 2010 flash crash, and many other shock events carrying overnight positions. Most of them were net gainers anyway or scratches. I never have & never would use a hedge since my risk is controlled by my position sizing & exit plan.

If you choose to use a hedge fine, there are plenty of successful traders that do not use them & some that do.

"I don’t really like hedging. To me, if something needs to be hedged, you shouldn’t have a position in it". Stanley Drunkenmiller
"Hedges can be expensive and good trades don’t need them, a good exit plan is the best hedge". Stanley Drunkenmiller
 
Last edited:
I am not sure if it's what @nooby_mcnoob meant, but I was thinking that if you establish such bracket with 30 DTE or so, you can use it to day trade for a month as long as stock is not moving outside of the band. This would work best if you trade same set of stocks.


That's the idea I had yes
 
Is there anyone here that had trades on during the flash crashes of 2010, 2015, forex, etc.
I'm wondering if anyone or even if professional traders use options to hedge against things like this?
Ie if you were long your stop would have been filled at a very low price wiping out accounts using even low portions of margin if you traded the unlucky stock eg Accenture
Your question makes absolutely no sense. How are you supposed to know when the Flash Crash will occur? If one knew, one would be VERY WEALTHY.

I've said this before. In a flash crash, there is no way to get out of your trade. I repeat, NOTHING will get you out until it's done. Back in 2010, the crash was followed by a sharp recovery. But that's not a certainty. There might not be a recovery next time.
 
Your question makes absolutely no sense. How are you supposed to know when the Flash Crash will occur? If one knew, one would be VERY WEALTHY.

I've said this before. In a flash crash, there is no way to get out of your trade. I repeat, NOTHING will get you out until it's done. Back in 2010, the crash was followed by a sharp recovery. But that's not a certainty. There might not be a recovery next time.
You're not supposed to know. That's why I'm essentially asking about insurance!

A recovery is useless if you either get margin called or shit yourself and close at the bottom
 
I've never had any serious risk into any of these so I can't be helpful, but it's an interesting discussion.

There are basically two cases here:

Flash crash with quick recovery
Flash crash without recovery

Frankly, I would consider the first one more difficult to deal with as I assume there would be all around attempts to bust trades on the motivation that "the true price was not reflected in the trade", injecting additional non-determinism into an already difficult scenario. When it comes to interpreting the rulebook in one's favor, the big guys have all the advantages.
 
Sell a call and buy a put 1:1 to your trade so it's like a bracket order but less stingy on price touches and also an almost free hedge.

Alternatively he could buy DOTM puts as insurance on longs, or calls as insurance on shorts. They'll be extremely cheap and protect against a large downside swing.
 
Alternatively he could buy DOTM puts as insurance on longs, or calls as insurance on shorts. They'll be extremely cheap and protect against a large downside swing.
I think the problem with all this for day trading is that stops are tight and positions are large (relative to account size). I don't see how anything can protect you within a day. So the only solution I can think of is to day trade prop money. Think of the split as paying for the hedge plus all the other benefits.
 
You're not supposed to know. That's why I'm essentially asking about insurance!

A recovery is useless if you either get margin called or shit yourself and close at the bottom
Flash crash happened in 2010. That's 10 years ago!

Yes, it could happen again, but are you going to buy "insurance" for all your trades until the next flash crash happens? That might not happen for another 10 years from now. Hence why I said your worries made no sense in the earlier post.
 
Back
Top