Quote from Landis82:
I am a supertrader extraordinaire who needs to obviously monitor markets closely, but can't resist whining about people who post non-trading issues. In fact, 90% of my 7,500 posts are whining and crying and ranting and pouting. Where is my bottle? Where is my pacifier? Where is blankie? WAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!
Actually, how about a simple illustration of how fallacious the author's logic is? Let's use a simple derivative, a short-term interest rate (STIR) future, e.g. eurodollar.Quote from ByLoSellHi:
The article I posted speaks exactly to the point you are complaining about.
Did you even read it?
Here's the pertinent section:
"Bear in mind, these are ânotionalâ values of derivatives, not the amount of money âat riskâ here. However, if even 1% [a conservative figure just for the sake of being conservative] of the $1 Quadrillion is actually at risk, youâre talking about $10 trillion in âat risk.â
Quote from Martinghoul:
Actually, how about a simple illustration of how fallacious the author's logic is? Let's use a simple derivative, a short-term interest rate (STIR) future, e.g. eurodollar.
Currently, the Sep9 Eurodollar contract open interest stands at arnd 1mn. A single Eurodollar contract notional value is $1mn, which, basically, suggests that the mkt's total notional exposure is arnd $1trn, which is rather large. However, the risk of one contract is only $25/bp. If you do the arithmetic, you'll have to conclude that the author's 1% of notional at risk assumption suggests that they think a move of 400bps in the front Eurodollar contract is "conservative".
It's just crap reporting, is all...