Quote from facultus:
LOL! Ok, Ok, my curiousity was peaked with Texas Hedge and the O'Hare Spread so I did some searching:
Texas Hedge: A transaction that increases risk. Alternately, two or more related positions whose risk is additive rather than offsetting. An example might be buying calls to 'hedge' a long position in the underlying.
I would imagine it was aptly called the Texas Hedge because you're "betting the ranch"
O'Hare Spread: An insanely large position in a futures market, plus a cab ride to the airport. At the end of the day, either you've made a lot of money and you hop a plane to Hawaii, or you've lost much more than you have and you hop a plane to someplace out of reach of U.S. justice.
If anyone is interested I found an interesting site that has
"financial slang" definitions:
http://www.margrabe.com/Devil.html
Quote from facultus:
LOL! Ok, Ok, my curiousity was peaked with Texas Hedge and the O'Hare Spread so I did some searching:
Texas Hedge: A transaction that increases risk. Alternately, two or more related positions whose risk is additive rather than offsetting. An example might be buying calls to 'hedge' a long position in the underlying.
I would imagine it was aptly called the Texas Hedge because you're "betting the ranch"
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Quote from mgkrebs:
A Texas hedge is when a commercial who is already long the physical, goes long in the futures market. Say a farmer, who would normally be hedging by shorting, decides he is bullish, and goes long wheat, or a feedlot operator buying a bunch of cattle futures.

