Quote from BulldogFX:
Going long and short on the same pair at the same time in the same account in FX is technically not "hedging" but it's called hedging anyway.
The NFA banned it mainly because it allows for the possibility of churning.
They kind of threw the baby out with the bath water imho in that "hedging" can be used as an effective money management technique that protects customers from losing money every bit as much as the new FIFO rule protects customers against possible brokerage and acct. manager churning.
Maybe this is simplistic but here's how I see it...
Let's say I'm short EURUSD 1 mini at 1.4000 and the market moves against me. I decide to go short or "dollar-cost-average" in another 1 mini every 25 pips the market moves up.
At 1.4150 I have 6 minis on I'm 150 pips away from my initial entry. I've had enough.
I go long my total volume of 6 minis at 1.4150 and "hedge" my short position losses. No matter how far the market goes up from this point my open loss remains the same (except for interest and extra commissions add-ons).
When/if the market retraces down and starts to cooperate with my initial positions, I release the "hedge" (hopefully at a small gain, loss, or even) and I am now free to hopefully cash in on the 6 short positions as price continues to move down.
NFA have taken this MM technique away.
FXCM-UK and Gain Capital- UK accounts are still "hedging" capable. It's only NFA registered US brokerages who have been forced to disallow the practice.
your a joke. Stick to your day job of being a IB for FXCM and GAIN.
leave the trading to the pros