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Earn BIG on inter-exchange hedges

October 06, 2005 12:43 IST

In the first part of this article, I dealt with how essential it is for an investor/ trader to slash his risk even at the cost of sacrificing returns to a minor degree. In the second part, we will go through the dynamics of the trade as also the rationale for this activity.

Low cost factor

If a trader took a long position in the equity futures and hedged it by way of buying puts on the same underlying, we saw in the previous article that the returns suffered tremendously.

If a hedge was initiated by writing an option in the contrary direction of the futures trade, the capital outlay will be high as the trader pays margins on both the trades. As we all know capital constraints hound all of us and expensive propositions are, therefore, unlikely to gain wide acceptance.

How to win in the stock market

On the other hand, commodity exchanges provide excellent low-cost opportunities as the margin requirements are extremely reasonable and affordable by all and sundry in the F&O segment.

A case study of a pure equity derivative hedge where a trader is long and short to balance the risk vis-a-vis an inter-exchange model is given below.

SPOT THE DIFFERENCE

Equity-derivative hedge

Inter-exchange hedge

Titan Inds v/s Gold

Security

Margin

Instrument

Margin

Titan Inds fut short

83,000

MCX gold futures long

24,000

Write Titan OTM puts

75,000

Titan Inds futures short

83, 000

Total

1,58,000

Total

1,07,000

As can be seen from the table, the cost advantage is too significant to be ignored. In many cases, this differential itself is likely to act an as impediment to initiating the hedge.

Greater risk spread

Inter-exchange hedges are excellent for spreading out the risk over a broader front. In the above example itself, if a trader was bearish on Titan Industries because gold prices were rising and therefore input costs would zoom, he was clear that futures had to be shorted.

That is where the similarity between the two hedging strategies end! In the pure equity play, writing a put would mean reducing the loss in case the futures trade went out of hand.

In the case of the inter-exchange hedge, Titan futures were short sold and gold futures were purchased. Since we know that gold prices were rising so we were bearish on Titan, the gold long position would yield profits.

Even if the Titan short position turned against us, a stop loss to the extent of the notional profits on gold futures could be enforced and the trade could be closed at no profit/ no loss! In the case of inter-exchange hedging, we have not reduced the loss, we have cut the loss out.

More focussed approach

Inter-exchange hedges cannot be initiated across the board on all equity shares. But any correlation between the commodities available for trade with listed companies which are impacted by the price swing in raw materials are a plum opportunity.

In the above table, the only choice a trader had in the pure equities segment was to hedge the scrip against itself or the Nifty. Hedging against itself meant a narrow outlook and hedging against the Nifty meant hedging against unrelated scrips due to the bouquet approach.

On the the other hand, price swings in gold were used to hedge gold against Titan Inds which was the company directly impacted by the commodity swing. Needless to say, clear focus means higher profits and lower risks.

Now that we have seen the benefits from inter exchange hedges, we will get down to the actual opportunities that specific scrips vis-à-vis commodities are presently available. That is in the third and concluding part of this series. Till then, have a profitable day.

The author is a Mumbai based investment consultant.

Vijay L Bhambwani
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