NFA Introduces New Anti-hedging Rules
Tuesday, 28 April 2009 13:23

 
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by John Jagerson

The NFA (National Futures Association) proposed a rule change to the CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission) last year that was approved and will begin applying to forex dealers in the U.S. on May 15th 2009. There are two unrelated features in the rule change. The most controversial feature has to do with "hedging" or hedged forex positions. The second feature has more to do with the conditions that must be applied before a trader's position can be adjusted by a dealer. This article will discuss the changes and why they may not be such a bad thing.Hedging
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For more detail check out the second article in this series on the NFA's new hedging rules.

Anti-Hedging Rule
There are some unique trader behaviors in the spot forex market. Some order types exist here and nowhere else and some of the trading strategies and techniques that can be seen applied here are almost unknown in other capital markets.

Sometimes this is due to the nature of the most liquid and actively traded market in the world that presents unique opportunities to profit. However, often it is because the retail forex market has a larger percentage of first time active-traders than any other and there are plenty of other parties waiting to take advantage of these emerging investors.

The anti-hedging rule is supposed to address a confusing trading technique used by many inexperienced traders called hedging. Traditionally, hedging is what someone that owns a spot commodity will do to fix their price rather than suffering from unpredictable market movements in the future. For example, a corn producer may sell corn futures against their stock so that if the price of corn goes down they will have profits to offset their inventory losses.

The nature of a true hedge will eliminate the possibility of losses from price movement but it will also eliminate the ability to profit from favorable price movement. This is ideal for a commodity producer but serves no purpose for forex traders who are essentially speculators.

Despite its disadvantages, however, unscrupulous system sellers and dealers have marketed the ability to hedge your forex positions. That means that it is possible to hold long and short positions on the same currency pair at the same time even though they will clearly cancel each other out. Some traders do this as a replacement for stops or as a component of overly-complicated, spread and commission generating-systems or EAs.

A hedge like this only leads to losses. Rather than paying one spread to enter a trade, a hedger pays two spreads. Additionally, interest roll over will always be negative, which in the longer term could add up to significant losses if the trade is very leveraged.

Dealers told the NFA during the comment period that they did not know why anyone would want to hedge but that because customers were asking for it they provided the functionality. This behavior was definitely good for dealers and system or EA sellers who are paid based on the spread and are probably the parties generating the "demand" for hedging in the first place.

After May 15th a trader entering a short position on a currency pair they are already long will have their position closed or washed out. The same is true in reverse. If a trader was determined to continue hedging they could enter the contrary position within a different margin account but that adds another layer of complexity to an already impaired trade. While this is only a U.S. rule right now it is likely to be applied in the other major retail forex markets in the near term.

There are ways to legitimately "hedge" or fix risk in a forex trade while leaving the upside unlimited with options. Click here to start our free course on forex options.

Adjusting Trader Positions
In the past if there were "server errors" or other miscellaneous problems in the price feed from your dealer and your trade was filled at the wrong price the dealer could alter that position according to their terms of service. It is not a surprise that most trade adjustments were in favor of the dealer.

In the future, dealers will only be able to adjust a trade price in two circumstances.

1. The trade is adjusted in favor of the customer.
2. The dealer has a STP (Straight Through Processing) dealing model that has no human intervention and they were given a bad price by their liquidity provider. This means that if your STP dealer gets a bad price from their counterparty then the dealer can pass that adjustment through to you.

This pass-through can only be done if one of the dealer's principles sign off on the adjustment and provide documentation of their bad price to you. That does make it more difficult to adjust prices and could save a lot of traders a considerable amount of frustration. 

Some traders are reacting to the rule changes with an attitude that the NFA should but out of their business and others are more positive. Regulation is a sensitive subject as there are many rules that make no sense but these two changes do not seem to fall into that category. The spot forex has been the "wild west" of the trading world for too long and some increased maturity is needed.

Comments Add New
Noel Page  - Anti-hedging rule is a bureaucratic scam   |2009-05-04 19:29:52
I don't know who stands to gain the most from this new rule but it certainly
won't be serious traders.
Even small traders like myself can "hedge" a
$10,000 spot forex account very succesfully and conservatively to return an
average of $1000 per week. If "increased maturity" means that a trader
must sell all his stock before he can buy any new stock - then the whole
business world will collapse.
Noel  - Anti- hedging   |2009-05-05 02:14:15
In fact if you want to be long stock and short it at the same time (hedging) you
will be washed out. So far the business has not collapsed.
Jonny   |2009-05-06 10:39:30
Hedging is dangerous? Says who? I can't believe these anti-hedging speculation
from unsuccessful traders. Does anybody understand what hedge is? Clearly not.
Most successful traders trade the opportunities they see irrespective of
whether their new position is an offset of their earlier trades or not. They
trade one or two pairs so clearly, they will have a lot of offset orders at the
same time. They all will have TP and SL set and once they set it, they forget
about it because their experience tells them it will either hit TP or SL. They
trade opportunities and a lot of them will be inadvertent hedges, not blatant
immediate hedge you think amateurs engage in. Get this straight. This
anti-hedge is designed to thwart successful and highly profitable traders. And
certainly not to protect the market much less the traders. Damn straight it is
bureaucratic scam. It won't help anyone except themselves and the brokers. Bu...
Kareem  - Quick Question   |2009-05-08 11:58:07
Does this hedging rule still apply if you are in and out of trades within hours
within the day? Thanks, Kareem
John Jagerson  - Quick Question   |2009-05-08 12:08:54
Kareem,

Yes it does but keep in mind that is really isn't a problem for folks
who want the same effect as hedging. Check out the second article in this series
where I explain why that is the case.

If you really want to hedge you still
can but it just isn't called hedging and the mechanics are slightly different
but the effect and costs are identical.
mike   |2009-05-17 22:29:59
Does the second part of the rule include slippage and re-quotes?When do you
think if ever that all fx dealers,brokers,whatever will have to be regulated?
John Jagerson  - Mike's question   |2009-05-18 02:46:50
Mike,

The second part of the rule does not cover slippage - that is a part
of just about any market. But it does cover their ability to requote your order
fill if they made a mistake.

Forex dealers are regulated right now and have
been for a long time but there just aren't very many regulations. These regs are
two new ones that did not exist before.
Chidi Ogbonna  - hedging...   |2009-06-07 13:02:36
Why force traders who want to hedge not to? If a trader thinks hedging is the
best strategy for him, why stop him from doing so? I just don't understand all
these anti-hedging hullabaloo. This is definitely not in the interest of the
trader who wants to make serious money.
John Jagerson  - Hedging   |2009-06-08 03:00:37
Chidi,

If you read the next article in the series you will see that this does
not actually prevent a trader from managing a short term and long term strategy
on the same pair. It does prevent the dealer from doubling your market exposure
but it does not prevent the trader from doing what they want to do.
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