Quote from Traden4Alpha:
You say its not a challenge, but then you go on to say:
This sounds like the epitome of a challenge to me.What you suggest is a very interesting extension of pairs-trading to baskets in an industry. It would be a huge challenge to sort the 60-70 REITs in a way that puts 20 in the long basket (i.e., those with upside reversion/movement potential) and 20 in short basket (i.e., those with downside reversion/movement potential) while keeping the two baskets nicely balanced with regard to interest rate exposure, geographic region, and office/commercial/residential category exposure. Very tricky.
This seems easier to me as long as the fraction of variance of price movement in the prime trade is relatively constant with respect to the hedged variable. E.g., if interest rate fluctuations explain 20% of the variance of price movement of my tradable, then I might take a small hedge position in something that is more directly tied to interest rate movements (e.g., an instrument tied to bonds).
I disagree that its an intentional directional play because I'm making no assumptions about whether the hedge will go up or down. I'm only hedging to remove variance due to some financial variable (e.g. interest rates or forex) that my system doesn't track.
At best you could argue that every hedge is an unintentional directional play because the short side of the hedge only adds profit when the short-side instrument drops in price. But I say this is really unintentional because if you knew the short side was going to drop, then you could trade it all by itself.
I agree with you that hedging is a way to reduce portfolio variability. I see hedging as an explicit admission of ignorance about the direction of some element of price movement. It is a way to remove risks (both potential profits and losses) associated with parts of the price movement that I have insufficient knowledge about. Thus the point of hedging is to avoid making a directional play by cancelling out directional moves that one has no ability to predict.
You make a lot of good points so I will only address a few.
> You say its not a challenge, but then...
Finding homogenous universes to hedge is easy...
Building the quant systems to automate the hedging requires talented traders and software engineers.
(I have a Computer Science degree... plus 300,000 trades... so I'm both).
> potential) while keeping the two
> baskets nicely balanced with regard > to interest rate exposure, geographic > region, and
> office/commercial/residential category > exposure. Very tricky.
Excellent point.
Everything has to be screened and "normalized".
Example...
You would tend to hedge a REIT that specializes in office space...
With another one specializing in office space.
And make adjustments for geography, diversification/size of company, etc.
Quantitative analysis is a multi-tasker's dream.
> I disagree that its an intentional directional play because I'm making
I will stick with my original point. This takes some thought.
** Hedging any external risk is a directional bet. **
2 examples:
(1) I'm worried that the Canadian dollar will keep rising versus US dollar... so I buy the CN$ futures contract.
(1) I'm am worried that I will die... so I by life insurance.
BOTH are directional bets. The 2nd is a bet that you will die soon.
Both can be viewed as insurance with a real cost that decreases volatility.
What you suggest is a very interesting extension of pairs-trading to baskets in an industry. It would be a huge challenge to sort the 60-70 REITs in a way that puts 20 in the long basket (i.e., those with upside reversion/movement potential) and 20 in short basket (i.e., those with downside reversion/movement potential) while keeping the two baskets nicely balanced with regard to interest rate exposure, geographic region, and office/commercial/residential category exposure. Very tricky.