Mister Imperceptible wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2018 1:13 am
@jacob
Regarding liquidity, I’ve read that those holding junk silver don’t have much of an issue getting the metal value for their coins.
In bulk, as in several pounds worth, you can find dealers who will pay 70-80% melt value for junk silver. It's unlikely they'll actually melt it rather than try to sell it for maybe 120% melt.
I recognize the utility of options, but I will need to study them. It seems dangerous but I know the best hedge funds use them wisely. Is Taleb’s book on this a good resource or should I look elsewhere?
What scares me about paper commodities is counterparty risk. Will those funds holding a basket of futures behave the way they are supposed to? Ray Dalio seems to think so, that’s why he’s even willing to have paper gold instead of vaulted. Harry Browne would disagree.
These comments go together... Hedge funds more than $100m or so don't deal with exchange-traded options, unless they're actually dealing in options arbitrage. The size and liquidity just aren't there. They usually deal with banks who will write them a specialized contract, or credit default swaps which are mostly standardized.
Most such contracts (all forwards and CDS's) have daily collateral transfers. That is, there's a daily settlement price based on the price of some other asset that usually trades on an exchange, and then one side makes up to the other the difference between that day's settlement and the previous day's. So your risk is limited to your counterparty going under the next day, and even then there's bankruptcy court.
As an example, John Paulson's funds made something like $10 billion shorting subprime mortgages (by buying CDS on subprime mortgage-backed securities), and the funds got paid in full... and two of his counterparties were Lehman and Bear Stearns.
I know Bridgewater quite well actually from my last real job, but never met Ray.