It can get quite complicated actually, and agree with
@newwurldmn, my situation is drawdown, I prefer to keep drawdown very low. I will hedge on top of a hedge so as to profit on the underlying in case of reversal patterns not reversing, hedge at earnings time, don't want to sell stocks cause they pay good dividends. ALL of my long term trading in commodities is going against major trends, normally catching 5-15% profitable trades each year, selling/buying new contract base on 9 year durations extremes, so gotten use to many breakevens and occasional losses, some breakeven trades do get to first and only target which are very decent but only 10% of positions. I will use options of underlying, use stock options to hedge futures and vis versa, in stocks I have many shorts to hedge part of the longs in stocks, and futures to hedge both stocks and other futures.
I don't see why getting out of a major 1-9 year trend cause market is retracing, market might not retrace enough to add on more positions and I would lose out if I couldn't get in back on way up/down. To me the big money has generally been long term, there are times some markets like Eurodollar was going nowhere for seven years, but these are opportunities for the trader to learn other ways to generate profits by learning other ways to do so. Options, selling naked, spreads..etc
I have my doubts that Hedge funds actually hedge much, one manager said it is a term to have clients feel warm and fussy. If they were actually hedging, would they have so large of loses? And can't say size matters, Buffet uses options in huge numbers.