As stated, your question is equivalent to the existence of a large exotic 4-ball (a smooth $D^4$ which cannot be smoothly embedded into $\mathbb{R}^4_{std}$). 

The existence of a flip would give rise to an exotic $S^4$, by gluing the $D^4$ at infinity using the flip diffeomorphism. Removing a (small) standard ball from this $S^4$ gives a large exotic $D^4$, since it contains a smooth submanifold $K'$ which cannot embed in $\mathbb{R}^4_{std}$. 

Conversely, if you had a large exotic $D^4$, then you could adjoin a collar neighborhood of $S^3\times \mathbb{R}$ to get an exotic $\mathbb{R}^4$ which has a standard end (diffeomorphic to $S^3\times \mathbb{R}$), and therefore admits a flip.  

Although I'm not an expert, I'm certain that the existence of a large exotic 4-ball is open (otherwise, the 4D smooth Schoenflies conjecture would imply the 4D smooth Poincare conjecture). 

I realize that this does not answer the spirit of your question, which is whether there is a large exotic $\mathbb{R}^4$ *which does not have a standard product end* and which admits a flip.