September 14th, 2010, 10:23 am
QuoteOriginally posted by: gauravkumar2Suppose, a trader wants to buy instrument A but required quantity is not available in market. Now he consumes the available liquidity and for rest of the quantity of A he buys alternative intstruments (say B, C, D with equivalent exposure).You should never buy the full equivalent exposure. The utility of the last marginal unit of A is less than the incremental cost of random factors or volatility introduced by B, C, and D.Or put better, suppose A is so beneficial that I want to own 100 shares. 100 shares combining A, B, C, and D is less beneficial. So I will only want to own 75 shares of this combination at the outset.You should not always put on a full hedge.