Hedging Strategies Using Futures
Hedging Strategies Using Futures
FUTURES
Sankarshan Basu
Professor of Finance
Indian Institute of Management Bangalore
Hedging
3
Long Hedge – Example
• On May 15, a petroleum product producer has
negotiated a contract to buy 1 million barrels of
crude oil. The price that will apply in the contract is
market price on Sep 15.
• Spot price on May 15 is $100 per barrel
• September crude oil futures price on the NYMEX is
$105 per barrel
• Each futures contract on NYMEX is for the delivery of
1,000 barrels
– The company can hedge its exposure by going long on
1,000 September futures contracts
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Long Hedge – Example
Case 1: Let spot price of oil on Sep 15 be $110 > futures contract price
• The company buys oil in spot by paying $110
• Because Sep. is the delivery month for futures contract, the futures price on Sep.
15 should be very close to spot, say $111
• On that date co’s gain from futures position = $111 - $105 = $6 (by closing the long
futures contract)
• Then, the net cost of buying oil = $110 - $6 = $104
Case 2: Let spot price of oil on Sep 15 be $103 < futures contract price
• The company buys oil in spot by paying $103
• Because Sep. is the delivery month for futures contract, the futures price on Sep.
15 should be very close to spot, say $104.
• On that date co’s loss from futures position = $105 - $104 = $1
• Then, the net cost of buying oil = $103 + $1 = $104
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Short Hedge
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Short Hedge – Example
• On May 15, a petroleum product producer has
negotiated a contract to sell 1 million barrels of
crude oil. The price that will apply in the contract is
market price on Sep 15.
• Spot price on May 15 is $100 per barrel
• September crude oil futures price on the NYMEX is
$105 per barrel
• Each futures contract on NYMEX is for the delivery of
1,000 barrels
– The company can hedge its exposure by going short on
1,000 September futures contracts
7
Short Hedge – Example
Case 1: Let spot price of oil on Sep 15 be $110 > futures contract price
• The company sells oil in spot at $110
• Because Sep. is the delivery month for futures contract, the futures price on Sep.
15 should be very close to spot, say $111
• On that date co’s loss from futures position = $111 - $105 = $6 (by closing the
short futures contract)
• Then, the net price realized by selling oil is $110 - $6 = $104
Case 2: Let spot price of oil on Sep 15 be $103 < futures contract price
• The company sells oil in spot at $103
• Because Sep. is the delivery month for futures contract, the futures price on Sep.
15 should be very close to spot, say $104.
• On that date co’s gain from futures position = $105 - $104 = $1
• Then, the net price realized by selling oil
= $103 + $1 = $104
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Basis
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Variation of Basis Over Time
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Impact of Basis on Net Buying / Selling Price
Notations:
S1 = Spot Price at time t1
S2 = Spot Price at time t2
F1 = Futures Price at time t1
F2 = Futures Price at time t2
b1 = Basis at time t1
b2 = Basis at time t2
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Impact of Basis on Net Buying / Selling Price – contd.
13
Basis Risk and Hedging
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Cross Hedging
• Cross hedging: when two assets in the spot
and futures contracts are different
• Example:
– An airline wants to hedge against future price of
jet fuel, which has no futures contract
– It may use heating oil futures contract.
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Cross Hedging and Basis Risk
• Consider S2* as the price of the asset underlying
futures contract at time t2 and S2 being the price of
the asset in the spot market
• By hedging the price paid/received by the company
is
= S2 + F1 – F2
= F1 + (S2* – F2) + (S2 – S2*)
• S2* – F2 is the part of the basis if asset hedged and
asset underlying futures were same
• S2 – S2* is the part of the basis due to difference
between two assets
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Choice of Futures Contract
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Choice of Futures Contract – Delivery
Month
• A contract with a later than spot transaction date delivery
month is chosen because
– A long hedger can avoid taking delivery of physical asset which can be
expensive and inconvenient
– A short hedger can avoid giving delivery of physical asset which can be
expensive and inconvenient
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Hedge Ratio
Hedge Ratio
= (The size of the position taken in futures contract)
/ (The size of the exposure)
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Minimum Variance Hedge Ratio
Notations:
• ΔS = Change in Spot price, S, during the life of the
hedge
• ΔF = Change in Futures price, F, during the life of the
hedge
• σS = Standard deviation of ΔS
• σF = Standard deviation of ΔF
• ρ = Coefficient of correlation between ΔS and ΔF
• h = hedge ratio that minimizes the variance of
hedger’s position
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Minimum Variance Hedge Ratio – contd.
S
• h
F
Hedge Ratio, h
h
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The Hedge Effectiveness
2
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Optimal Number of Contracts
Notations:
• NA = Size of positions being hedged
• QF = Size of one Futures contract
• N = Optimal no. of Futures contracts for hedging
h NA
N
QF
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Reasons for Hedging an Equity Portfolio
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Hedging an Equity Portfolio
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Hedging an Equity Portfolio – Example
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Hedging an Equity Portfolio – Example
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Hedging an Equity Portfolio – Example
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Hedging an Equity Portfolio – Example
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Changing The Beta of A Portfolio
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Rolling The Hedge Forward
t1 t2 t3 t4 tn T
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Problem No. - 1
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Problem No. – 1 (Ans.)
• Answer: FALSE
• Explanation:
• Consider for example the use of forward
contract to hedge a known cash inflow in a
foreign currency.
• The forward contract locks in the forward
exchange rate – which is in general different
from the spot exchange rate
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Problem No. - 2
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Problem No.– 2 (Ans.)
• Answer: FALSE
• Explanation:
• The minimum variance hedge ratio is
• ρ(σS/σF)
• It is 1.0 when ρ = 0.5 and σS= 2σF
• Since ρ < 1.0, the hedge is not perfect
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Problem No. - 3
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Problem No.– 3 (Ans.)
• Answer: TRUE
• Explanation:
• If the hedge ratio is 1.0 the hedger locks in a
price of F1 + b2.
• Since both F1 and b2 are known , this has a
variance of zero and must be the best hedge
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Problem No. 4
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Problem No. 4 (Ans. & Explanation)
• All standard deviations are on quarterly basis
• Optimal hedge ratio in 3-month contract
= 0.8*(0.65/0.81) = 0.642
• Meaning:
– The size of the futures position should be 64.2% of
the size of the company’s exposure in a 3-month
hedge.
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Problem No. 5
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Thank You!
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