In the standard MBA one-period binomial model, the value of an option is
$v = \frac{1}{R}\bigl(\frac{u - R}{u - d}V(sd) + \frac{R - d}{u - d}V(su)\bigr)$
where $R$ is the realized return over the period and the stock goes from $s$ down to $sd$ or up to $su$, where $d\lt R\lt u$, and $V$ is the option payoff. Note
$\frac{dv}{ds} = \frac{1}{R}\bigl(\frac{u - R}{u - d}V'(sd)d + \frac{R - d}{u - d}V'(su)u\bigr)$
is the "delta" hedge. Suppose $V$ is a call spread consisting of long a call struck at slightly higher than $sd$ and short a call struck slightly lower than $su$, then $V'(sd) = V'(su) = 0$, hence $dv/ds = 0$.
Wat?! How can that be???