Title: Agri-trading and Hedging: Opportunities for Farmers
1Agri-trading and Hedging Opportunities for
Farmers
- Ann Berg
- Futures and Commodity Markets Specialist
National Conference on Emerging Platforms for
Agriculture Marketing
Commodity Futures Market Project
Implemented by Financial Markets International of
Washington, DC and Mumbai, India.
2What is hedging?
3Hedging is the transfer of risk from one party to
another by buying or selling futures contracts
- These risks include
- Price risks
- Counterparty risks
4Futures defined
- Futures are purchase and sales agreements
- Futures are cleared by a central counterparty
called the Clearing House - Futures are a zero sum game
5Futures defined
- Futures are not stocks no equity ownership
exists - Futures are not bonds -No fixed income return is
guaranteed - Futures are proxy instruments held until
exchanged for the underlying good
6Value of futures contracts
- Price transparency
- Price discovery
- Markets integrator
- Liquidity
- Infrastructure booster
- Forward price indicator
7Forward price signalsClosing CBOT wheat prices
Sept 14 2007
8(No Transcript)
9Why hedge?
- Lock in an attractive price
- Achieve income stability
- Avoid risk
- Plan cropping mix
- Obtain better credit arrangements
10Who should hedge?
- Warehouses that stock seasonal inventories (short
hedgers) - Millers, processors, feedlot operators (long
hedgers) - Exporters
- Importers
- Any supply chain player wanting to avoid price
risks
11Which farmers should hedge?
- Large capitalized farmers able to withstand
margin calls - Farmers with year to year stable production
- Farmers with skill set and sophistication for
futures trading - Only about 30 of US farmers hedge
12Short Hedging
- Short hedging involves the sale of futures
contracts against ownership of the underlying
commodity
13Short hedging by warehouse
- buy 1200 quintals Potatoes _at_Rs. 800/q
- Sell 1200 quintals Potatoes _at_ Rs.500/q
- Loss Rs. 300/q
- Sell 4 contracts _at_ Rs. 850/q (30MT each)
- Buy 4 contracts _at_ Rs.500/q
- Profit Rs. 350/q
- Net profit Rs.50/q
14The HAFED ExperienceTextbook case of wheat
hedging
- HAFED began using futures soon after launch of
wheat contract in July 2004 - Strictly a short hedger sold futures against
cash purchases - Quickly increased its use of the NCDEX wheat
futures - Quickly increased its use of the delivery
mechanism
15HAFEDs hedging program
Year Qty purchased MT (physical wheat) Qty hedged MT (short futures sales) Qty delivered MT (against futures short)
2004-05 70000 4770 10
2005-06 31814 35710 13300
2006-07 107043 81450 20860
16HAFED took advantage of large carrying charge
between harvest and mid-year prices and placed
short hedge in December contract to maximize
returns
17HAFEDS hedge executions
MSP Bonus of Wheat (April 2006) 700
Mandi, VAT Transportation Charges 110
Interest Storage Charges (for 8 months - i.e., up to Dec 2006 72
Cost of MSP Wheat in Dec 2006 882
Selling Rate of Wheat in Dec 2006 on NCDEX (Rs. 1017 Rs. 27 expenses) 990
Net Profits per Quintal 108
18Deliveries in NCDEX were scant during April May
harvest months, occurring later in the year.
19HAFEDs assessment of futures
- Auditable records of sales prices i.e., futures
transactions - Aggregation of small purchases
- Quality assurance - achieved by strict assaying
methods by registered warehouses - Liquidity
- Price stabilization
20Aggregation can optimize results for farmers
- Avoid margin calls
- Reduce distressed selling
- Benefit from quality production
- Reduce exploitation
- Increase credit availability
- Increase income
- Profit share in aggregation
21Thank you