Title: Hedging Strategies in Futures Markets
1Hedging Strategies in Futures Markets
- Fin 288
- Fixed Income Analysis
2Hedge Terminology
- Short Hedge
- A short hedge occurs when the hedger already owns
an asset or will own an asset soon and expects to
sell it at some date in the future. In this case
the hedger will take a short position in the
futures market, guaranteeing the price in the
future at which the asset can be sold.
3Short Hedge Example
- You have agreed to sell 10,000 bushels of corn on
July 1 at the spot price on that day. - You are afraid that the price of corn may
decrease between now and July 1. - The current futures price for delivery of corn in
July is 2.10. - The current spot price of corn is approximately
1.79 a bushel.
4Recent Corn Spot Prices
5Short Hedge
- By taking agreeing to take a short position 20
futures contracts you decrease the impact of a
price decline. - Assume that on July 1 the spot price for corn is
1.60. You will sell your corn for - (1.6)(10,000)16,000
- Assume that the contract expires on July1 so the
futures price equals the spot price. You can
close out the futures contract making - (2.10-1.6) (10,000) 5,000
6The two positions combined
- You made 16,000 in the spot and 5,000 in the
futures market for a total of 21,000. - Given that you still sold 10,000 bushels of corn
You have effectively received 21,000/10,000
2.10 per bushel (ignoring transaction costs)
7Short Hedge
- What if the spot price of corn is 2.40 on July
1? - You sell your corn for
- (2.4)(10,000) 24,000
- In the futures market when you close out the
contract you loose - (2.1-2.4)10,000 -3,000
- The total amount you receive is 21,000
8Impact of Hedge
- Regardless of the changes in the spot price the
result of the hedge is that you have received
21,000 for 10,000 bushels of corn. - Note If you had not hedged you would have been
better off when the price increased without the
hedge.
9Hedge Terminology
- Long Hedge
- A long hedge occurs when the hedger knows that it
will be necessary to purchase a given asset at a
point in the future and wants to lock in the
future price today. The alternatives to the
hedge are buying the asset in the future at the
market price or purchasing it today and holding
onto it until the asset is needed in the future.
10Long Hedge
- Similar to the short hedge by simultaneously
entering into a long position and the spot market
you can fix the price to be paid in the future.
11Assumptions
- The hedge worked because of three assumptions
- The underlying asset in the futures market is the
same as the asset in the spot market. - The end of the exposure matches the delivery date
exactly - The contract was closed out at the futures price
prior to delivery
12Basis Risk
- The basis is a hedging situation is defined as
the Spot price of the asset to be hedged minus
the futures price of the contract used. When the
asset that is being hedged is the same as the
asset underlying the futures contract the basis
should be zero at the expiration of the contract.
- Basis Spot - Futures
13Basis Risk
- The easiest way to illustrate the basis risk is
with an exampleLet St represent the spot
price at time tFt represent the futures price at
time tbt represent the basis at time t
14Basis Risk Illustration
- Assume we enter into a short hedge at time t 1
and close out the hedge at time t 2. The
profit on the futures position will equal F1-
F2The total price paid received from the hedge
is then - S2 F1 - F2
- By definitionb1 S1-F1 and b2 S2-F2
15Basis Risk
- By rearranging the price equation S2 F1 - F2
F1 (S2- F2) F1 b2 - When the hedge is entered into F1 is known but b2
is unknown. - The fact that b2 is not known represents the
basis risk.
16Basis Risk Long Hedge
- The same expression holds for a hedger
undertaking a long hedge.Loss on Hedge F1-F2
price paid is S2 F1-F2 - Again the effective price paid is F1b2 where b2
is unknown when the hedge is taken out.
17Mismatch of Maturities 1
- Assume that the maturity of the contract does not
match the timing of the underlying commitment. - Assume that our short hedger for Corn has agreed
to sell corn on the spot market on October 15.
However, the months that corn delivery are
available are March, May, July, September and
December.
18New Short Hedge
- To hedge the position you now need to take out a
short position for the September futures
contract. - The current futures price for September is 2.28
a bushel. - The contract will now need to be closed out on
October 15, prior to when the futures price and
spot price converge.
19New Short Hedge
- What if the Spot price on October 15 is 1.90 and
the futures price for December Delivery is 2.10? - You sell 10,000 bushels for 1.90 each or
- 19,000
- You close out the futures position and profit
- (2.28-2.10)(10,000) 1,800
- The total price received is 20,800 or 2.08 a
bushel.
20Result 2
- What if the futures price for delivery in
December is 2.35 and the spot price is 2.20 - You sell corn in the spot market and receive
- 2.20(10,000) 22,000
- You close out the futures position and loose
- (2.28-2.35)(10,000)-700
- The total you receive is 21,300 (less than you
would have received in the spot market alone)
21Additional Risk
- In our examples we assumed that the timing of the
spot position was fixed. It may be the case that
the timing of the spot position is not known with
certainty. - This is especially the case of a long hedger who
knows that s/he will need to acquire an asset in
the future, but not know the exact date.
22Minimizing Basis Risk
- Given that the actual timing of the spot asset
may also be uncertain the standard practice is to
use a futures contract slightly longer than the
anticipated spot position. - The futures price is often more volatile during
the delivery month also increasing the
uncertainty of the hedge - Also the long hedger could be forced to accept
delivery instead of closing out.
23Mismatch in Maturities 2
- Assume that instead of our original problem there
are a string of future dates over which corn will
be needed. - Anticipated corn demand
- Date Amount
- May 1 15,000 Bushels
- July 1 10,000 Bushels
- September 1 20,000 Bushels
24Strip Hedge
- To hedge this risk, it is possible to hedge each
position individually. - On Feb 1 the firm could
- enter into short May contracts for 15,000 bushels
- enter into short July contracts for 10,000
bushels - enter into short Sept contracts for 20,000 bushels
25Strip Hedge continued
- On each date the respective hedge should be
closed out. - The effectiveness of the hedge will depend upon
the basis at the time each contract is closed
out. - (Note in this example each hedge again
coordinated with the maturity of a contract)
26Rolling Hedge
- Another possibility is to Roll the Hedge
- Feb 1 enter into short May contracts for 45,000
Bushels - May 1 enter into long March contracts for 45,000
Bushels - enter into short July contracts for
30,000 Bushels - July 1 enter into long July contracts for 30,000
Bushels - enter into short Sept contracts for 20,000
Bushels - Sept 1 enter into long Sept contracts for 20,000
Bushels -
27Rolling the Hedge
- Again the effectiveness of the hedge will depend
upon the basis at each point in time that the
contracts are rolled over. - This opens the from to risk from the resulting
rollover basis. - When the contract is closed out there is a cost
if there has been a loss on the position.
Therefore there may be a dollar cost to rolling
over the hedge (basically a margin call).
28Hedging
- So far we have assumed that the underlying asset
is an exact match for the spot position to be
hedged. Often this is not the case. Even if the
asset underlying the futures contract is
identical to the spot asset, the prices of the
two will not always move together. - Two questions
- What futures contract should be used?
- How many contracts should be taken out?
29Hedge Ratio
- The hedge ratio is the ratio of the size of the
position in the futures market to the size of the
spot exposure being hedged. - In our examples so far we have utilized a hedge
ratio equal to one. In other words the size of
the futures position was the same as the size of
the position in the underlying asset.
30Minimum Variance Hedge Ratio
- The ideal hedge ratio should be the one that
minimizes the variance of the value of the hedged
position.
31Minimum Variance Hedge Ratio
- DS be the change in the spot price S during a
period of time equal to the life of the project - DF be the change in the futures price F during a
period of time equal to the life of the project - sS be the standard deviation of DS
- sF be the standard deviation of DF
- r be the coefficient of correlation between DS
and DF - h be the hedge ratio
32The hedge ratio
- The hedge ratio is the ratio of the amount of
futures positions undertaken in the futures
market to the number of positions held in the
spot market. - Let NA the units of asset A needed at time 2
- Let NF the number of futures contracts held to
offset the price variation in the spot asset. - The hedge ration is then
33Determining the Hedge Ratio
- Assume that you are holding an NA units of an
asset which can be stored for free and you plan
on selling it in the future. - To hedge the risk of a price decline you want to
undertake a short hedge using NF futures
contracts.
34Total value of portfolio
- When you sell the asset and close the futures
position the total change in the value of your
two positions will equal
35- Given that
- You can substitute
36- Given our earlier definitions this can be written
as
37Hedgers Objective
- The objective of the hedger is to minimize the
change in the value of the two positions - NA is known at the beginning of the period and
will not change. Therefore if the hedger can
minimize the changes to
38Hedge positions
- We just showed the change in the short hedgers
position is - Likewise, the change in the long hedgers position
is
39Minimum Variance Hedge Ratio
- We want to find the hedge ratio that minimizes
the variance of the change in the position held
by the hedger. - This will depend upon the covariance between the
spot price and futures price and the variance of
each variable.
40Min Variance Hedge
- The variance of either hedge position is
- Taking the first derivative of the variance and
setting it to zero produces the hedge ratio
41Estimating the Hedge Ratio
- The hedge ratio can be rewritten to allow easy
estimation via regression analysis
42Regression Review
- Equation of a line Y a bX
- Graphing combinations of X and Y form a line.
- X is the independent variable and placed on the
horizontal axis. Y the dependent variable and
placed on the vertical axis (The value of Y
depends upon X) - a is the Y intercept and b the slope of the line.
43We can observe observations of X,Y and plot them
44Regression Estimates the line that best explains
the relationship between the variables
45The goal is to minimize the sum of the squared
residuals
46Estimating the Regression
- Y a bX
- The slope of the line is then equal to
- The Intercept is
47Confidence in the ResultsR-Squared (R2)
- R2 will range up to one. It is the portion of
the relationship explained by the regression - R-Squared (R2) correlationYX2b2sx2/sY2
- Examples
- An R2 of one implies all the points are on the
line - An R2 of 0.5 would mean that half of the
relationship is explained by the line.
48Confidence in the ResultsT-statistic
- The t-statistic tells us whether or not we can
reject the hypothesis that the variable is equal
to zero. - The higher the t-statistic the higher the
confidence that we can reject the hypothesis that
the slope is zero. - If you cannot reject the hypothesis -- It implies
that the dependent variable has no impact on the
independent variable.
49T-Statistic
- A Rule of Thumb
- The confidence levels are based upon the number
of observations, but in general - If you have a t-statistic above 2.0 you can
reject the null hypothesis at the 95 level. - (With 120 observations a t-statistic of 2.36
allows rejection at the 99 level)
50Standard Error
- Provides a measure of spread around each
variable. - Provides a confidence band similar to standard
deviation) - We can use standard error to estimate the T-
Statistic (Assuming a normal distribution) - T-StatinterceptA/SEA T-Statslope B/SEB
51Quick Review
- Linear Regression - Provides line the best
describes the relationship between two variables - R2 - Portion of relationship explained by the
estimated line - T-Statistic - Confidence in the estimate of the
variable (Is is statistically significant?) - Standard Error - Confidence Interval
52Applying the Regression to the Hedge Ratio
- The minimum variance hedge ratio could be
estimated by b in the regression. - (St) ? ? (Ft) ?t
53Hedging using the hedge ratio
- Assume that the airline you are working for wants
to hedge against a possible increase in the price
of jet fuel. - There are not futures contracts available for jet
fuel so a contract on a different asset must be
used. - What contract should be used?
- What is the associated hedge ratio?
http//corporate.bmo.com/rm/commodity/images/Hedgi
ng_JetKero_Prices.pdf
54Contract options
- NYMEX futures contracts trade on Unleaded
Gasoline, Light Sweet Crude Oil, Brent Crude Oil,
Heating Oil, Natural Gas, and Propane - High correlation of spot prices for Heating Oil
and Jet Fuel indicate it might be a good
candidate for the contract (Correlation .994
from Jan 1995 to October 2004).
http//corporate.bmo.com/rm/commodity/images/Hedgi
ng_JetKero_Prices.pdf
55A Hypothetical Hedge
- Assume you know that the airline has average
consumption of 100 Million gallons each month and
you want to hedge the price of Jet Fuel for June. - The Heating Oil contract calls for trading to
stop on the last business day prior to the
beginning of the delivery month. Assume you plan
to close out your contract during June at the
same time you make a spot market purchase for the
month.
http//www.eia.doe.gov/oil_gas/petroleum/info_glan
ce/prices.html
56A Hypothetical Hedge
- You would need to use the July contract so you
had the month of June to close out your position. - The Price for July delivery on 2/3/05 is 1.2277
per gallon - There are 42,000 gallons (1,000 barrels) per
contract.
57Hedge Alternatives
- Without using the hedge ratio you would need to
enter into 100 Million / 42,0000 2380.95 or
approximately 2381 long contracts - By running a regression using the spot price and
futures price assume that you discover that your
hedge ratio is 1.07 futures positions for each
spot position. This implies a need to enter into
107 million / 42,000 2547.62 or apporximately
2548 long contracts
58Hedge Results
- The current spot price of jet fuel is 1.4345 per
gallon. - Assume that on June 15 you decide to close out
the contract and the price of Jet Fuel is 1.5345
per gallon. - The effectiveness of the hedge depends upon the
futures price for delivery of Heating oil in
July. Assume that the futures price is 1.3077
59Hedge Results
- Assuming a 1 to 1 hedge ratio
- Spot Price of Fuel 1.5345 per gallon
- Gain on Hedge 1.3077-1.2277.09 per gallon
- Effective cost of jet fuel 1.5345-.09 1.4445
- Assuming a 1.07 hedge ratio
- Spot Price of Fuel 1.5345 per gallon
- Gain on Hedge 1.3077-1.2277(1.07) .0963 per
gallon - Effective cost of jet fuel 1.5345-.0963
1.4382
60Effective Cost
- Total cost with 1 to 1 hedge 144,450,000
- Total cost with 1.07 Hedge ratio 143,820,000
- A difference of 630,000 for the month!
61Problems
- Current Open Interest for July 2005 is 8532
contracts, there may not be enough liquidity in
the market to cover the hedge (will there be
enough short participants willing to take a short
position? - It might be difficult to close out the futures
position, however current open interest for the
March 2005 contract is 69970 contracts (there is
some seasonal variation to also worry about).
62Tailing the Hedge
- Adjustments to the margin account will also
impact the hedge and need to be made. - The idea is to make the PV of the hedge equal the
underlying exposure to adjust for any interest
and reinvestment in the margin account.
63Should a firm Hedge?
- Tax incentives for Hedging
- Costs of Financial Distress as an Incentive
- Principal Agent Conflicts as an Incentive
- Principal-Agent Conflicts as a Disincnetive
- Lack of Owner Diversification as an Incentive
- Transaction Costs as a Disincentive
- Competitive Environment
64Tax incentive for Hedging
- Consider a mining firm that expects to mine 1,000
ounces of gold bullion this year at a cost of
300 per ounce. - Assume that there are two possible prices for
gold, 300 or 500 and both are equally possible. - If the firm has positive income it can use a
20,000 tax credit to offset taxes and it expects
to pay a 20 tax rate.
65Unhedged Firm
- Sale Price 300 500
- Gold Revenue 300,000 500,000
- Futures Result 0 0
- Less Production Costs -300,000 -300,000
- Pretax Profit 0 200,000
- Tax Obligation 0 -40,000
- Add Tax Credit 0 20,000
- Net Income 0 180,000
- Expected After tax Revenue 90,000
66Hedged Firm
- Sale Price 300 500
- Gold Revenue 300,000 500,000
- Futures Result 100,000 -100,000
- Less Production Costs -300,000 -300,000
- Pretax Profit 100,000 100,000
- Tax Obligation -20,000 -20,000
- Add Tax Credit 20,000 20,000
- Net Income 100,000 100,000
- Expected After tax Revenue 100,000
67Cost of Financial Distress
- In the previous example the pretax expected
income was the same for cases, but the after tax
net income differed. - In a perfect market, investors could diversify
with out any costs and eliminate any risk
associated with the change in expected profits. - However, if a firm pursues a high risk strategy
in the real world and goes bankrupt, there are
high transaction costs.
68Cost of financial distress
- By Hedging the firm can minimize the cost
associated with possible bad outcomes and
therefore increase the value of the firm.
69Principal Agent Conflicts as an Incentive
- In efficient markets manger (agents) act in the
best interest of the shareholders (principals). - Shareholders, in theory, can diversify by holding
a portfolio of securities, if the firms fails the
loss is limited. - The Manager has a much larger stake in the firm
succeeding and may be more risk averse than the
shareholder therefore hedging when the
shareholder would prefer not to hedge.
70Principal Agent Conflicts as an Disincentive
- The manger may also run into internal conflict if
the hedge looses money. It is difficult to
explain a loss in derivative markets to the board
of directors and shareholders, even if the loss
was associated with a hedging strategy. - Therefore the manager may resist hedging for fear
of perceived poor performance or even job loss.
71Lack of Owner Diversification
- It may be that the owners are not really
diversified as assumed in efficient markets they
would then have an incentive to pressure the
manger to hedge to decrease risk.
72Transaction Costs
- In the long run gains and losses on hedging
should offset each other ignoring transaction
costs. - However regardless of a loss or gain there is a
transaction cost to hedging, therefore in the
long run there may be a cost to hedging that
decreases the value of the firm.
73Competitive Environment
- If the retail price fluctuates with the wholesale
price of inputs then the profit margin for the
firm stays relatively constant without hedging. - In this case hedging may actually increase the
volatility of income compared to competitors.