Risk Management in Trading
eBook - ePub

Risk Management in Trading

Techniques to Drive Profitability of Hedge Funds and Trading Desks

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Risk Management in Trading

Techniques to Drive Profitability of Hedge Funds and Trading Desks

About this book

A comprehensive resource for understanding how to minimize risk and increase profits

In this accessible resource, Wall Street trader and quantitative analyst Davis W. Edwards offers a definitive guide for nonprofessionals which describes the techniques and strategies seasoned traders use when making decisions. Risk Management in Trading includes an introduction to hedge fund and proprietary trading desks and offers an in-depth exploration on the topic of risk avoidance and acceptance. Throughout the book Edwards explores the finer points of financial risk management, shows how to decipher the jargon of professional risk-managers, and reveals how non-quantitative managers avoid risk management pitfalls.

Avoiding risk is a strategic decision and the author shows how to adopt a consistent framework for risk that compares one type of risk to another. Edwards also stresses the fact that any trading decision that isn't based on the goal of maximizing profits is a decision that should be strongly scrutinized. He also explains that being familiar with all the details of a transaction is vital for making the right investment decision.

  • Offers a comprehensive resource for understanding financial risk management
  • Includes an overview of the techniques and tools professionals use to control risk
  • Shows how to transfer risk to maximize results
  • Written by Davis W. Edwards, a senior manager in Deloitte's Energy Derivatives Pricing Center

Risk Management in Trading gives investors a hands-on guide to the strategies and techniques professionals rely on to minimize risk and maximize profits.

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Yes, you can access Risk Management in Trading by Davis Edwards in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Corporate Finance. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Wiley
Year
2014
Print ISBN
9781118768587
eBook ISBN
9781118772843
Edition
1

CHAPTER 1
Trading and Hedge Funds

This chapter introduces how trading organizations, such as hedge funds or the proprietary trading desks of investment banks, apply risk management concepts to operate their businesses. Risk is uncertainty or a potential for loss. Risk isn’t necessarily bad. Risky activities often provide higher profits than safe investments. Techniques developed to manage risk are used by trading desks to drive profitability by balancing risk and reward. Some of these techniques include choosing the most profitable investments, allocating a limited amount of money between multiple investments, eliminating risks through hedging, and assigning size limits to various investment strategies.
There are a limited number of decisions that can be made by trading desks to manage risk. Profitability starts when traders do a good job identifying investment opportunities. After that point, common decisions are: how to allocate capital between investment opportunities, limiting how much money is allocated to any single investment, and reducing the size of investments by liquidating or placing protective trades.

OVERVIEW OF BOOK

This book describes how risk management techniques are used by professional traders to reduce risk and maximize profits. The focus of the book is how traders working at hedge funds or on investment bank proprietary trading desks use risk management techniques to improve their profitability and keep themselves in business. However, these techniques can be applied to almost any trading or investment group.
This book focuses on six major activities that are part of managing trading businesses.
  1. Backtesting and Trade Forensics. Backtesting is a disciplined approach to testing trading ideas before making bets with actual money. Trade forensics is a post-mortem analysis that identifies how well a trade is tracking pre-trade predictions and if markets have changed since the trade was initiated.
  2. Calculating Profits and Losses. Once a trade has been made, traders have to calculate the daily profits and losses. For some financial instruments, this is as simple as checking the last traded price from an exchange feed. For other investments, calculating the fair value of the trade is challenging.
  3. Setting Position Limits. The size of investments that traders can make are typically limited by the volatility of their expected daily profits and losses. In other words, risk can be a way to measure size. As a result, the goal of hedge fund traders is to maximize the profits relative to a fixed amount of risk.
  4. Hedging. Hedging is a trading strategy designed to limit profits and losses in one investment by taking an offsetting position in another asset. For example, a hedge fund might want to lock in profits associated with a physical asset like an oil well that they can’t sell right away. They can agree to sell oil at a fixed price and remove the risk of price fluctuations.
  5. Managing Option Risk. Certain types of financial instruments, particularly options, present much more complicated risk management challenges for traders. Risk managers have developed a variety of techniques to model this risk and fit options risk with other position limits.
  6. Managing Credit Risk. Trading can’t be done in isolation. Every time someone wants to buy an asset, someone else needs to sell. Not all trades settle right away—trading often involves obligations that are taken on in the future. As a result, traders depend on their trading partners meeting their trading obligations, and are exposed to the risk that their trading partners will default on their obligations.

TRADING DESKS

Professional traders often work on teams called trading desks. A trading desk is a group whose members are traditionally seated side-by-side at a series of long desks (usually filled with computer equipment) that is responsible for buying and selling financial products for an organization. Trading desks will typically specialize in one or two types of financial products. Some trading desks will specialize in stocks, others in bonds, and so on.
Many types of companies will maintain trading desks. Some of these desks will focus on supporting the company’s other lines of business—buying fuel for a trucking company or financial products on behalf of investors, for example. However, a couple types of trading desks are operated as their own line of business. The most prominent of these are mutual funds, hedge funds, and proprietary trading desks at banks.
Some organizations whose focus is on trading for profit are:
  • Mutual Funds. Mutual funds are a pooled-investment fund where the leadership of the fund manages investments on behalf of investors. These funds are restricted from many investment strategies deemed too speculative or risky for uninformed investors.
  • Proprietary Trading Desks. A trading desk found in many investment banks that operates like an internal hedge fund to invest the firm’s capital.
  • Hedge Funds. Hedge funds are pooled investment funds similar to mutual funds. They differ in that they do not cater to the general public—only to accredited investors. Many hedge funds seek to profit in all kinds of markets by using leverage (in other words, borrowing to increase investment exposure as well as risk), short-selling, and using other speculative investment practices that mutual funds are restricted from using.
One of the largest differences between hedge funds and proprietary trading desks compared to mutual funds or individual investors is that they will often make trades designed to make profits when prices decline. This is called shorting the market and allows profitability in both rising and falling markets. Shorting is not exclusive to hedge funds and trading desks—it can be done by individual investors. For example, shorting is commonly practiced in various commodity markets.
Shorting involves agreeing to sell something that the trader does not currently own. For example, a soybean farmer might agree to sell his crop (which hasn’t been grown yet) for a fixed price per bushel when the crop is harvested. If prices fall after that point, the sales contract will acquire value to the farmer. If the contract allows him to sell 10,000 bushels of soybeans at $20 per bushel and prices fall to $10 per bushel, the contract is worth $10 per bushel (or $100,000) to the farmer. The contract is an asset to the farmer, and if a trading market exists for those contracts, could be sold to another trader.

HEDGE FUNDS

Hedge funds are a prototypical trading organization. They have few restrictions on their activities and typically have no source of income other than their skill ...

Table of contents

  1. cover
  2. Series
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Preface
  7. CHAPTER 1 Trading and Hedge Funds
  8. CHAPTER 2 Financial Markets
  9. CHAPTER 3 Financial Mathematics
  10. CHAPTER 4 Backtesting and Trade Forensics
  11. CHAPTER 7 Hedging
  12. CHAPTER 8 Options, Greeks, and Non-Linear Risks
  13. CHAPTER 9 Credit Value Adjustments (CVA)
  14. Afterword
  15. Answer Key
  16. About the Author
  17. Index
  18. End User License Agreement