Hedging
Hedging
Hedging
Minimization of Risk
Perfect Hedge: one that completely eliminates the risk.
Basis Risk
Asset to be hedged is different from asset underlying future
contract.
Uncertainty about buying and selling date of asset
Closing out of hedge before delivery date
Basis Risk
It is June 8 and a company knows that it will need to purchase 20,000 barrels of
crude oil at some time in October or November. Oil futures contracts are
currently traded for delivery every month on the NYMEX division of the CME
Group and the contract size is 1,000 barrels. The company therefore decides to
use the December contract for hedging. The futures price on June 8 is $88.00 per
barrel. The company finds that it is ready to purchase the crude oil on November
10. It therefore closes out its futures contract on that date. The spot price and
futures price on November 10 are $90.00 per barrel and $89.10 per barrel.
Hedge Ratio
Often, Asset transacted in spot market is different from the asset underlying the
futures contract. – Cross Hedging
Hedge ratio= Ratio of quantity of position taken in future market to exposure in
physical market
𝑄𝐹
ℎ=
𝑄𝑆
where,
QF= Quantity of position taken in futures market
QS= Quantity transacted in spot market
Relationship between hedge ratio and
variance
Minimum Variance Hedge
A company wants to buy
𝜎𝑆 22000 bales of cotton after
ℎ=𝜌 three months. One future
𝜎𝐹
contract = 100 bales
Where , Case 1: standard deviation of
h= hedge ratio changes in spot as well as
future price is same. and both
𝜎𝑠 = Standard deviation of ΔS
the spot and futures markets
𝜎𝐹 = Standard deviation of ΔF are perfectly correlated.
𝜌 = Correlation coefficient between ΔS and Case 2: standard deviation of
ΔF spot price change is .030 and
that of future price is .040. and
correlation coefficient between
future and spot price is .80
Hedge effectiveness
Also written as
where VA is the dollar value of the position being hedged (¼ SQA), VF is the dollar value of one futures
contract (¼ FQF) and h^ is defined similarly to h* as