|
|
|
|
|
by tmansour
1298 days ago
|
|
It is a separate asset class yes. But it ties to other markets in a number of ways. In your example, there's two things you could do depending on your usecase:
1) You think inflation will go up and capitalize on it. Today, you might think that a good way to do that is to short SPY. That's good, not great - because it's a proxy: inflation could still go up, and you SPY could go up as well (correlation is not 1:1 for a number of reasons). The best way to express that view is by buying inflation event contracts: more direct, no basis risk, cleaner. This use-case was super common when I was at Goldman and Citadel, which is where we got the idea. 2) You hold SPY but worry about the exposure of your holdings to inflation: you can use event contracts to hedge that exposure very precisely... think of it as a precise, meticulous surgery on your portfolio to eliminate (or even take) risks that are very difficult to eliminate with traditional instruments. |
|
One other question, how did Citadel and Goldman do this before your platform existed? Were they big enough to just call up some bank and create a specialized product for them?