Recent judgements pertaining to Income Tax and Goods and Service Tax, Investment Terminology and other related & unrelated articles from various sources. Disclaimer: The content is for general information only and is not intended to be advice on any particular matter. Readers should seek appropriate professional advice before acting on basis of the said information.
Stocks
27 July 2010
Cross-hedging
Hedging one instrument's risk with a different by taking a position is a related derivatives contract. This is often done when there is no derivatives contract for the instrument being hedged, or a suitable derivatives contract exists but the market is highly illiquid. The success of cross-hedging depends completely on how strongly correlated the instrument being hedged is with the instrument which underlies the derivatives contract. Additionally, the credit quality of the derivative and the instrument being hedged needs to be similar and their markets need to be of similar liquidity, so that price changes are similar. Lastly, the maturity of the derivatives contract must be at least as long as the maturity of the desired hedge, otherwise the investor will be left with an unhedged exposure for a period of time.
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