Folks, stop thinking about perefct hedging and you’ll get this quickly. In a perfect hedge, you pay money to get the protection you need. For example, you own stock and then you buy (i.e., spend more money) to buy the insurance via a put. With delta hedging, you do not want to pay for insurance and you are willing to take some risk in case dynamic hedging doesn’t work very well.
For example, buy 1000 shares of stock for $20 a share, that’ll cost you $20,000. Now you can immediately offset your cost by selling some calls or puts. When you sell an option you get paid. Let us say your put delta =0.50, with a strike of $20, so if the stock drops by $1, the put will rise by $0.50, and asume the put is selling for $1 right now. Then you know that 1000/.0.50 = 2000 puts, i.e., you need to sell put 20 contracts, that’ll get you $2000. So, you investment is costing you only $18,000. That’s the first sign of a hedge right there.
The dynamic part comes when the stock drops again or rises back to $20 or more, etc. When these things happen, delta changes (something you can measure the rate of using gamma by the way), and now your hedge may be in danger, meaning if the stock drops by $2 to $18, you are at risk. Why? Because your investment will be worth $18000, but then the puts you sold are in the money, so if it’s near expiration, you may have to pay $2 to the put buyer. That means your investment is worth only $16000 (versus $18000 net investment at the beginning). So, here because of the big drop in stock price your delta hedge didn’t work very well, and so that’s why you have to dynamically adjust that by issuing more puts to continue to hedge.
If the stock drops to $19 and it’s expiration day, how has delta hedging helped? You try it.