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Hedging Strategies with Futures

The document discusses hedging strategies using futures, emphasizing the importance of reducing risks related to price fluctuations in various markets. It covers the types of futures positions (long and short), the concept of basis risk, and how to determine the optimal hedge ratio and number of contracts needed for effective hedging. Additionally, it touches on the use of index futures for portfolio hedging and the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) for calculating expected returns based on risk.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
27 views18 pages

Hedging Strategies with Futures

The document discusses hedging strategies using futures, emphasizing the importance of reducing risks related to price fluctuations in various markets. It covers the types of futures positions (long and short), the concept of basis risk, and how to determine the optimal hedge ratio and number of contracts needed for effective hedging. Additionally, it touches on the use of index futures for portfolio hedging and the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) for calculating expected returns based on risk.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Hedging Strategies Using Futures

Dept of Econ & Fin


BITS-Pilani Hyd Campus
Derivatives and Risk Management
Hedging Strategies Using Futures
Source: Chapter-3: 8th edition Hull Book
Why should we discuss about the Hedging Strategies Using Futures?
Many of the participants in futures markets are hedgers. Their aim is to use futures
markets to reduce a particular risk that they face. This risk might relate to
fluctuations in the price of oil, a foreign exchange rate, the level of the stock
market, or some other variable.
So, a study of hedging using futures contracts is a study of the ways in which
hedges can be constructed so that they perform as close to perfect as possible.
Learning Outcomes of this chapter

➢When is a short futures position appropriate?


➢When is a long futures position appropriate?
➢Which futures contract should be used? What is the optimal size of the futures
position for reducing risk?
Basic Assumption of this Chapter

In general investors try to change the hedging position based on the market
conditions but, in this chapter, we assume that no attempt is made to adjust the
hedge once it has been put in place.
that means
The hedger simply takes a futures position at the beginning of the life of the hedge
and closes out the position at the end of the life of the hedge.
Long & Short Hedges

➢A long futures hedge is appropriate when you know you will purchase an asset in
the future and want to lock in the price
Ex. Bread manufactures hedging on wheat prices.
➢A short futures hedge is appropriate when you know you will sell an asset in the
future and want to lock in the price.
Ex. Wheat Producer
Arguments in Favor of Hedging

➢Companies should focus on the main business they are in and take steps to
minimize risks arising from interest rates, exchange rates, and other market
variables

Arguments against Hedging


➢Shareholders are usually well diversified and can make their own hedging
decisions
➢It may increase risk to hedge when competitors do not
➢Explaining a situation where there is a loss on the hedge and a gain on the
underlying can be difficult
Basis Risk
➢In practice, hedging is often not quite as straightforward as this. Some of the
reasons are as follows:
1. The asset whose price is to be hedged may not be exactly the same as the asset
underlying the futures contract.
2. The hedger may be uncertain as to the exact date when the asset will be bought or sold.
3. The hedge may require the futures contract to be closed out before its delivery month.
These problems give rise to what is termed basis risk.
➢Basis is usually defined as the spot price minus the futures price
➢Over the time, the spot and futures prices do not change by same amount then it
leads
❖strengthening of the basis.
❖weakening of the basis.
Long Hedge for Purchase of an Asset
Define
F1 : Futures price at time hedge is set up
F2 : Futures price at time asset is purchased
S2 : Asset price at time of purchase
b2 : Basis at time of purchase
Short Hedge for Sale of an Asset
Define
F1 : Futures price at time hedge is set up
F2 : Futures price at time asset is sold
S2 : Asset price at time of sale
b2 : Basis at time of sale
Choice of Contract

➢Choose a delivery month that is as close as possible to, but later than, the end of
the life of the hedge.

➢When there is no futures contract on the asset being hedged, choose the
contract whose futures price is most highly correlated with the asset price. This is
known as cross hedging.
Optimal Hedge Ratio

Proportion of the exposure that should optimally be hedged is


S
h =
*

F
where
S is the standard deviation of S, the change in the spot price during the
hedging period,
F is the standard deviation of F, the change in the futures price during
the hedging period
 is the coefficient of correlation between S and F.
Optimal Number of Contracts-Example

➢Airline will purchase 2 million gallons of jet fuel in one month and hedges using
heating oil futures
➢From historical data F =0.0313, S =0.0263, and = 0.928

0.0263
h = 0.928 
*
= 0.7777
0.0313
Optimal Number of Contracts
Optimal Number of Contracts-Example
• The size of one heating oil contract is 42,000 gallons
• The spot price is 1.94 and the futures price is 1.99 (both dollars per gallon) so
that
VA = 1.94  2,000,000 = 3,880,000
VF = 1.99  42,000 = 83,580
• Optimal number of contracts assuming no daily settlement
= 0.7777  2,000,000 42,000 = 37.03

Optimal number of contracts after tailing


= 0.7777  3,880,000 83,580 = 36.10
Hedging Using Index Futures
To hedge the risk in a portfolio the number of contracts that should be
shorted is
VA

VF
where VA is the value of the portfolio,  is its beta, and VF is the value
of one futures contract
Example
S&P 500 futures price is 1,000
Value of Portfolio is $5 million
Beta of portfolio is 1.5
What position in futures contracts on the S&P 500 is necessary to hedge the
portfolio?
Changing Beta

➢What position is necessary to reduce the beta of the portfolio to 0.75?


➢What position is necessary to increase the beta of the portfolio to 2.0?
Why Hedge Equity Returns

➢May want to be out of the market for a while. Hedging avoids the costs of selling
and repurchasing the portfolio
➢Suppose stocks in your portfolio have an average beta of 1.0, but you feel they
have been chosen well and will outperform the market in both good and bad
times. Hedging ensures that the return you earn is the risk-free return plus the
excess return of your portfolio over the market.
Stack and Roll

➢We can roll futures contracts forward to hedge future exposures


➢Initially we enter into futures contracts to hedge exposures up to a
time horizon
➢Just before maturity we close them out an replace them with new
contract reflect the new exposure etc.
Capital Asset Pricing Model
➢The capital asset pricing model (CAPM) is a model that can be used to calculate the
expected return from an asset during a period in terms of the risk of the return.
➢𝐸𝑥𝑝𝑒𝑐𝑡𝑒𝑑 𝑅𝑒𝑡𝑢𝑟𝑛 𝑜𝑛 𝐴𝑠𝑠𝑒𝑡 = 𝑅𝐹 + β(𝑅𝑀 − 𝑅𝐹 )
where 𝑅𝑀 is the return on the portfolio of all available investments, 𝑅𝐹 is the return
on a risk-free investment, and β(the Greek letter beta) is a parameter measuring
systematic risk.
➢ When β=0, an asset’s returns are not sensitive to returns from the market. In this case, it
has no systematic risk and equation shows that its expected return is the risk-free rate;
when β= 0:5, the excess return on the asset over the risk-free rate is on average half of the
excess return of the market over the risk-free rate; when β= 1, the expected return on the
asset equals to the return on the market; and so on.

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