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Just what is Arbitrage Investment?
An article by Gary Durkin
©
Copyright 2005 - All Rights Reserved worldwide.
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In the simplest of terms, Arbitrage means to exploit price
differential.
Usually it meant looking at differing sources of an investment,
and if there was a price difference between Source A and Source B
- then the investor / dealer / broker / manager would buy from the
lower priced source, and sell on the higher priced source.
Example:-
The price of Stock ABC was $20 per share on Exchange XYZ
The price of the same Stock ABC on another Exchange 123 - was $15
The dealer would buy the stock from Exchange 123 for $15 - then
sell on Exchange XYZ for $20 - making $5 per share profit (minus
costs).
Typically the price differential was very small - and trading had
to be extremely quick and liquid - otherwise the markets could go
against you in a very short time.
Ten years ago Arbitrage was more commonplace than it is today -
for a number of reasons.
Nowadays, Arbitrage still exists, but either in limited formats
and availability as direct arbitrage, or more commonly in Hedge
Funds.
Hedge Funds can have Arbitrage as one of their investment
methodologies / strategies - and you will find that many of the
past Arbitrage Managers have switched across to Hedge Funds.
Even after the LTCM (Long Term Capital Management) scandal /
fiasco a few years ago - Hedge Funds continue to grow, and today
are the biggest and fastest growing investment style in the World.
This doesn't mean that Arbitrage is dead - as it can be part of
Hedge Funds. There are still some direct / explicit Arbitrage
Funds available in the World.
Most of these concentrate on M&A Arbitrage (Mergers and
Acquisitions) - or more usually Mergers.
The manager will actively seek companies which have been targeted
as potentials for takeover, and buy into that company, in the hope
the M&A activity will drive up the price.
This method is often enhanced by the use of leveraging (gearing up
/ borrowing) (remember LTCM?) - and sometimes using Derivative
Structures such as Options - or hedging methods such as selling
short.
Depending on the structure, methodology, management style,
leveraging etc., the potential rewards can be substantial, but so
can the risks.
Not all Arbitrage investments are the same - just like any other
asset class, I would strongly suggest that anyone considering this
should perform their own Due Diligence and seek professional
advice.
One very common place where Arbitrage happens every day - by
people just like you and me..... is eBay!
Sellers are locating items for sale from sources which may sell them
very cheaply (flee-markets, garage sales etc.) and then selling them
online for a tidy little profit.
These people are exploiting the price differential - arbitrage - and
there's nothing wrong with that!!
It’s all about ‘Supply and Demand’ - but that’s another story!
(the information contained herein is for
information purposes only and should NOT be considered as advice or
recommendation relating to the purchase or sale of any investment).
__________________
An article by Gary Durkin
Founder of the Internet Advice Center®
http://www.InternetAdviceCenter.com
Gary has more than a decade of offline international business
success behind him - each day controlling millions of dollars of
investments world-wide, and has been doing business online for 6
years.
© Copyright 2005 - All Rights Reserved worldwide.
You are free to distribute this article, providing it remains
unchanged and with the resource / bio box attached.
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