Useful equation to remember when thinking about leverage, forced trading and impact on prices is X = L * (L - 1) * R. Here R is the return on the underlying stock/futures/whatever, L is leverage and X is the trade required to maintain constant leverage after a price move.
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To get there, imagine a portfolio L:1 leverage i.e. you have
$L of positions for every $1 of equity. If the stock has a return of R, you now have equity of (1 + LR) and stock worth L(1+R)1 reply 0 retweets 9 likesShow this thread -
To maintain leverage of L you need the stock you hold to be worth L(1+LR) so you need to buy/sell X = L(1+LR) - L(1+R) = L + L^2R - L - LR = L(L-1)R Remember we are doing this per $1 of equity, so multiply by your initial account size to get a $ trade size.
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Couple of interesting things: 1. If L = 0 (you hold cash) or L = 1 (unlevered) then you never need to trade, your portfolio automatically tracks. 2. If 0 < L < 1 then L(L-1) is negative so you sell on price increases and buy on decreases, which is stabilising
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3. If L < 0 or L > 1 then you need to buy when the stock is up and sell when it is down, which is trend-following/destabilising behaviour. A recent L < 0 case is the XIV blowup and a recent L > 1 case is the Archegos blowup
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4. L(L-1) is quadratic, so when L gets big, X gets really big. For Archegos if we assume L=5 then L(L-1)=20 so whenever the stock went up 5% they would need to buy 100% of their initial position size to maintain leverage -- in retrospect not surprising that VIAC was up so much.
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This should say they need to buy 100% of their initial *account* size, not position size.
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