Managing perpetual futures positions through event volatility requires a thoughtful approach. I've been experimenting with a strategy that works pretty well—here's the core idea:
Start by maintaining your core perp exposure as planned. The real trick happens when you're near the event window: layer in an opposite directional bet using the 1-hour or daily timeframe on a derivatives platform. This acts as insurance against tail risk without forcing you to liquidate your main position.
The execution matters though. Watch your momentum indicators closely—if the price action flips in your favor early, exit the hedge and pocket that premium. But if volatility keeps climbing, let the hedge ride. You're essentially buying downside protection with a position that pays off when things get messy.
This approach keeps your convexity intact while capping your downside during uncertain periods. Way cleaner than over-hedging or sitting on the sidelines completely.
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ForkInTheRoad
· 01-16 09:46
This hedging approach is indeed clear, but the key still depends on the mindset during execution... I've tried similar strategies before, and the night before the event is the easiest time to mess up.
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unrekt.eth
· 01-15 10:59
NGL, this hedging logic sounds good, but can you really stay calm in real combat... I often just talk about it on paper.
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NFTRegretDiary
· 01-15 10:57
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StopLossMaster
· 01-15 10:56
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AlphaLeaker
· 01-15 10:55
It sounds like a reverse hedge has been added, but the real question is—are you sure you can walk away unscathed before the event occurs?
Managing perpetual futures positions through event volatility requires a thoughtful approach. I've been experimenting with a strategy that works pretty well—here's the core idea:
Start by maintaining your core perp exposure as planned. The real trick happens when you're near the event window: layer in an opposite directional bet using the 1-hour or daily timeframe on a derivatives platform. This acts as insurance against tail risk without forcing you to liquidate your main position.
The execution matters though. Watch your momentum indicators closely—if the price action flips in your favor early, exit the hedge and pocket that premium. But if volatility keeps climbing, let the hedge ride. You're essentially buying downside protection with a position that pays off when things get messy.
This approach keeps your convexity intact while capping your downside during uncertain periods. Way cleaner than over-hedging or sitting on the sidelines completely.