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Hedge Fund
A risky investment pool, generally open only to well-heeled investors, that seeks very high returns by taking very great risks.

 


Hedgers
The details of hedging can be somewhat complex but the principle is simple.

Hedge funds and technical analysis are not the common combinations. Hedge funds and technical analysis has been well overshadowed with hedge funds utilizing fundamental analysis.

Hedge Funds Extend Trends; Housing's Trend Is Ending
During a week when the CEO and CFO of the Bayou Management hedge fund came out of hiding to plead guilty to charges of conspiracy in misrepresenting their hedge fund's performance since 1997, ...

Hedge Funds
A hedge fund is private investment fund or pool that trades and invests in various assets such as securities, commodities, currency, and derivatives on behalf of its clients, typically high net worth individuals and institutions.

Hedge Funds
Investment Dictionary - Hedge Funds
What is a Hedge Fund?

Hedge fund
A fund, usually used by wealthy individuals and institutions, which is allowed to use aggressive strategies that are unavailable to mutual funds, and whose offering memorandum allows to take both long and short positions, ...

Hedge fund
Hedge funds are high risk collective investment funds that use a variety of techniques including complex arbitrage and short selling. They are often highly geared.

Hedge Volatility (VIX)
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"Buy when there's blood in the streets, even if the blood is your own," once said Baron Rothschild.

Hedge Funds: Healthy Risk?
Dec 2004
by Elliott Wave International's
Robert Folsom, Editor of Market Watch & Nicole Isaac
Elliott Wave International ...

hedge fund
Highly speculative, largely unregulated investment group that uses high-risk techniques, such as borrowing money and selling short, in order to make larger-than-normal trading profits.

Hedge fund risk
Investing in certain types of hedge fund can be a riskier proposition than investing in a regulated fund, despite a "hedge" being a means of reducing the risk of a bet or investment.

Hedge funds for dummies
By Jakob Jelling
Cashbazar.com
Hedge Fund, a term coined by the Australian author, financial journalist and sociologist Alfred Winslow Jones, first made entry into the finance dictionary in the 1940s.

Hedge funds on the other hand are allowed to invest in almost anything that is liquid enough for them. This means that - in theory at least - they ought to be able to generate a profit in any market conditions.

Hedge
An investment position taken in order to protect oneself from the risk of an unfavorable price move in a security. This can be accomplished by taking an offsetting position in a security that is already owned.

Hedge Fund
A hedge fund is a special type of fund with fewer restriction on the types of investments it can make. Of particular interest is a hedge fund's ability to sell short.

Hedge Fund Performance
There are several published studies that indicate hedge funds will outperform their mutual fund counterparts in bear markets.

Hedge - A position that reduces the risk of your primary position.
Hedging - The practice of offsetting the price inherent in any cash market position by taking the opposite position in the futures market.

Hedge Fund
What are Hedge Funds?
Like mutual funds, hedge funds pool investors' money and invest those funds in financial instruments in an effort to make a positive return.

cross hedge investment & finance definition
Offsetting a risk in a cash market security or commodity by buying or selling a futures contract for a similar investment.

Short hedge
Definition:
The sale of futures contracts to eliminate or lessen the possible decline in value of an approximately equal amount of the actual financial instrument or physical commodity. Related: Long hedge. ...

Natural Hedge
this is best described with an example. A Canadian-based company with operations in the US would have a natural hedge against its US dollar borrowings since all of its operations and sales in the US would be performed with local ...

Hedge funds have evolved to include a number of strategies, in addition to the balanced short-long strategy of Jones. For the most part, the term hedge fund now refers to any mostly unregulated fund using unconventional methods of investing.

Hedge funds typically operate under exemptions from many of the regulatory requirements imposed by securities and commodities laws. Many hedge funds are "offshore" funds, i.e., organized in locations outside the U.S. and offered only to non-U.S.

Hedge fund investors do not receive all of the federal and state law protections that commonly apply to most registered investments.

Hedge funds have a high entry barrier: The minimum investment is typically in the seven-figure area.

Hedge
The purchase or sale of options or futures contracts as a temporary substitute for a transaction to be made at a later date. Usually it involves opposite positions in the cash or futures or options market.
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Hedge Fund is designed to be a partnership arrangement between the fund manager and accredited investors, with the fund manager acting as the general partner responsible for making investment decisions.
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Cross Hedge
A technique using financial futures to hedge different but related cash instruments based on the view that the price movements between the instruments move in concert.
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These 75 hedges were the product of a screen to identify stocks that paid a dividend in every year of the Great Depression such that the lowest dividend equated to a yield of at least 4% on the stock price at the time the screen was run.

Nonetheless, hedge funds have been increasing in popularity. The Financial Times reports that a Citigroup survey found hedge funds as a whole added $85 billion in assets last year, with mid-size funds growing by 37 percent.

Buying Puts as a Hedge
With a volatile market, a fear on everyone's mind is committing new money to the market.
The worry is that what you invest today may lose 5% or 10% if the market declines.

- Fees are often paid as motivation to hedge fund general partners. On a less often basis such fees may be paid to a mutual fund manager. How much compensation is received will be based on an evaluation of the person?s performance.

The next level of participants is the large hedge funds who trade in the foreign exchange market for speculative purposes to try and generate alpha, or a return for their investors that is over and above the average market return.

Probably the most popular gold ETF is SPDR Gold Shares (GLD); gold ETF GLD security investments offer solid performance historically and provide a valuable hedge against market fluctuations.

Hedge fund
Hedge funds are part of so-called 'alternative investments'. Unlike equity or fixed-income funds they are not distinguished by type of investment.

Hedge Fund Hedge funds are designed for wealthy individuals and institutional investors, and are not regulated as other forms of investment funds are (e.g., mutual funds).

Hedge / hedged position A position established with the specific intent of protecting an existing position. For example, an owner of common stock may buy a put option to hedge against a possible stock price decline.

Hedge A strategy used to reduce financial risk, or the possibility of loss. For example, an investor owning 100 shares of the Nasdaq 100 (QQQ), could hedge that long position by owning a short position, or one put option.

Hedge
A hedge is typically accomplished by making approximately offsetting transactions that will largely eliminate one or more types of risk. Hedging Investors can use derivatives and covered warrants to hedge investments.

Hedge funds - is a general, non-legal term used to describe private, unregistered investment pools that traditionally have been limited to sophisticated, wealthy investors.

Hedgers
Hedgers are individuals or companies that trade in the futures market so they can establish a known price level to satisfy a future need to buy or sell the underlying commodity.

Hedge fund
A private investment partnership, owned by wealthy individuals and institutions, which is allowed to use aggressive strategies that are unavailable to mutual funds, including short selling, leverage, program trading, swaps, ...

Hedger
Person undertaking a hedge.
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Hedger - A person or firm who uses the futures market to offset price risk when intending to sell or buy the actual commodity. See Pure hedger, Selective hedger.

Hedge: In order to protect yourself from loss due to market price changes, you may take specific action to reduce your risk. This is known as a hedge.

Hedge Funds
Hedge funds also make up a significant segment of the forex trading market. Their forex trading activity is often purely speculative in nature and their dealing sizes can be quite large.

Hedge
LEAPS® puts provide investors with a means to hedge current stock holdings. Investors should consider purchasing LEAPS® puts if they are concerned with potential price drops on stock that they own.

Hedge Fund
A private investment partnership that can use leverage and derivatives, take both long and short positions, ...
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HEDGE - A method of reducing investment risk by making investments designed to offset the risks of existing investments.

Hedgelet
A simplified derivative instrument that allows investors to hedge or speculate on economic events such as housing prices, commodity prices, interest rates, currencies and economic indicators.

Hedge Ratio
The mathematical quantity that is equal to the delta of an option. It is useful in that a theoretically neutral hedge can be established by taking offsetting positions in the underlying stock and its call options.

Hedger: A trader who enters into positions in a futures market opposite to positions held in the cash market to minimize the risk of financial loss from an adverse price change; ...

Hedge
To reduce the risk in one security by taking an offsetting position in a related security.

Hedge Ratio
The number of futures or options required to hedge a given exposure in the cash market.
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Hedge: A conservative strategy used to limit investment loss by effecting a transaction, which offsets an existing position.
Holder: The party who purchased an option.

Hedge.
An investment made to minimize the impact of adverse movements in interest rates or securities prices.
Issuer.

Hedge ratio (delta)
For options, ratio between the change in an option's theoretical value and the change in price of the underlying stock at a given point in time.

Hedge: A transaction that reduces the risk on an existing investment position.

Hedge - a transfer of risk that typically involves offsetting a position with either the purchase or sale of options
High - highest price that occurs for a trading period
Index - a specialized average that represents a group of stocks ...

See also: Market, Stock, Investment, Hedge Fund, Trading