Hedge fund: refers to a financial fund that combines financial derivatives such as financial futures and financial options with financial instruments to obtain profits.
It is a form of investment fund, which means "risk hedge fund". Hedge funds use various trading methods to hedge, transpose, hedge and hedge to make huge profits.
These concepts have gone beyond the traditional operation scope of preventing risks and ensuring benefits. In addition, the legal threshold for launching and establishing hedge funds is much lower than that of mutual funds, which further increases their risks.
Extended data:
Hedge fund trading mode:
In the book Quantitative Investment-Strategy and Technology (edited by Ding Peng, Electronic Industry Press, 20121), the trading modes of hedge funds are classified into four types, namely, stock index futures hedging, commodity futures hedging, statistical hedging and option hedging.
1, stock index futures
Hedging of stock index futures refers to the behavior of taking advantage of the unreasonable price of stock index futures market, participating in the trading of stock index futures and stock spot market at the same time, or trading stock index contracts with different maturities and different (but similar) categories at the same time to earn the difference. Arbitrage of stock index futures can be divided into cash hedging, intertemporal hedging, cross-market hedging and cross-variety hedging.
2. Commodity futures
Similar to the hedging of stock index futures, commodity futures also have hedging strategies. When buying or selling a futures contract, they sell or buy another related contract and close both contracts at a certain time.
It is similar to hedging in transaction form, but hedging is to buy (or sell) physical objects in the spot market and sell (or buy) futures contracts in the futures market;
Arbitrage only buys and sells contracts in the futures market, and does not involve spot trading. Commodity futures arbitrage mainly includes cash hedging, intertemporal hedging, cross-market arbitrage and cross-variety arbitrage.
3. Statistical hedging
Different from risk-free hedging, statistical hedging is a kind of risk arbitrage by using the historical statistical law of securities prices, and its risk lies in whether this historical statistical law will continue to exist in the future.
The main idea of statistical hedging is to find out several pairs of investment varieties (stocks or futures, etc.). ) has the best correlation, and then find out the long-term equilibrium relationship (cointegration relationship) of each pair of investment varieties. When the price difference (residual of cointegration equation) of a pair of varieties deviates to a certain extent, they start to open positions-buying relatively undervalued varieties, shorting relatively overvalued varieties, and taking profits when the price difference returns to equilibrium. ?
The main contents of statistical hedging include stock matching transaction, stock index hedging, securities lending hedging and foreign exchange hedging transaction.
4. Option hedging
Option, also known as option, is a derivative financial instrument based on futures. The essence of option is to price the rights and obligations in the financial field separately, so that the transferee of the right can exercise his right to trade or not to trade within a specified time, and the obligor must perform it.
When trading options, the buyer is called the buyer and the seller is called the seller. The buyer is the transferee of the right, and the seller is the obligor who must fulfill the buyer's right.
The advantages of options are unlimited income and limited risk loss. Therefore, in many cases, using options instead of futures for short-selling and hedging transactions will have less risk and higher returns than simply using futures arbitrage.
References:
Baidu encyclopedia-hedge fund