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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Trade Binary


Trade Binary Options as a Hedging Strategy for Forex Trading

Posted by Shawn on Wednesday, June 10, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Forex traders often encounter failure of their strategies in the dreaded stop-loss zone. This zone, adjacent to the breakout point, is the fuzzy area where we Forex traders often place stops to protect ourselves from further losses. Each Forex trader who trade options uses different rules for his stop loss point. Usually this is slightly above or below the breakout point. But as we have all experienced, the problem is that a breakout often tests the breakout price, sometimes dropping slightly below the breakout price, ’shaking us out’ of our trade. Therefore the stop-loss point becomes fuzzy, forcing us to choose lower and lower stop-loss points, and wearing us out each time we re-enter the same breakout point.
Trade Binary Options using Binary Hedging Strategy

One attractive possibility is to hedge our Forex trade using a binary option hedge. This is actually much simpler than it sounds. What it actually does is shift our risk from the stop-loss zone to the area above the breakout point, where the prices are more likely to rise and where the breakout is less likely to fail due to the properties of trader momentum.

* Here we outline one such hedging strategy, using binary options trading to hedge against our Forex trades.
In this example, i place a trade of 1 mini lot EURUSD long, when its price crosses my breakout point of $1.00. Should the EURUSD test my breakout point before i exit this trade, i will place a $100 PUT binary option trade. What this does is shift my original breakout point lower, similar to a stop-loss, such that i am profitable as long as a test of the original EURUSD breakout point does not leave my Forex account with greater than a $70 loss. If I incur more than a $70 loss in my Forex account, then I immediately exit the EURUSD position.

* This has effectively shifted the risk of breakout failure from the below the breakout point to above the breakout point. The attractive feature of this hedging strategy is that most breakouts are often tested slightly the below breakout point. Using this hedging strategy we protect ourselves in the area below the breakout point rather then get worn out using a stop-loss that is lower than the breakout point, which is the common Forex trader practice. And the best part of this strategy is that the risk has been shifted to the area above the breakout point (our Forex trade must make at least $85 profit in order to cover the binary option loss). However we know that as long as the breakout has not failed, we will more than likely cover this hedge. Remember, the breakout is most likely to fail BELOW the breakout point, but now we are covered.

About the author: Jack Major is currently the Chief Risk Management Office of TradeSmarter.com, managing Risk and Strategies for all major market instruments. Previous to TradeSmarter, Jack was a senior consultant for many years for PricewaterhouseCoopers Global Risk Management

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