Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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A portfolio manager might balance investments in one industry with investments in another with a negative correlation, so if one falls, the other is very likely to rise, so the loss is offset. That's ok if you're taking a cautious approach (say you're retired or close to retirement and steady income is more important than speculating on gains). Another way to do this would be to insure your investment by means of "derivatives", and these are much used in the industry in various forms, futures and options being two of the relatively simple forms. "Hedge funds" allow themselves much greater latitude to use derivatives and can only generally be marketed to those who have money to burn.
Back to our (conventional) portfolio manager: he/she could use options to hedge (i.e. protect) the portfolio by buying an option to sell the investments at a set price if their value were to fall; the cost of the option (its "premium" - it's like an insurance premium) is small in relation to the insured value. Like your insurance premium, it's not used if it's not needed, and it's an acceptable expense for the protection it gives. Like the company that sells you insurance, the "writer" of the option has to come up with the contracted value of the investment even if it's now worth squat, but that's not your problem. The problem is that the loss on the wrong side of an option can be much, much greater than the amount invested.
Forwards and futures (essentially the same thing) are another derivative and have long been widely used in the commodities markets to lock in prices so you know now what you're going to have to pay (or what you will get for it) in several weeks, months or even years. Whatever the commodity - gas, oil, petrol, aviation fuel, wheat, orange juice, coffee, tea, copper, tin are just a few more common examples - there's probably a futures market for it somewhere. So here you're also "hedging" your future or forward commercial risk but again it's a case of protecting against price rises (if you're buying) or falls (if you're selling); it's not about speculative investment.
Normally regulated funds (such as Serial's) are strictly limited in the extent to which they can invest in derivatives for their own sake, but "hedge funds", which are unregulated and subject to much more stringent rules re. their marketing, will happily invest more of the fund value in derivatives, not just the simpler ones described here, but also some real brain-stranglers. Those are for another, very rainy, day.
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