David:
Couple of nagging ones (for me):
1. Does basis risk apply only in a cross-hedge? When the hedging asset (e.g. crude oil) is different from the underlying asset (e.g. jet fuel?)
2. I am a little confused about some of the prices used in the illustration of the basis risk. May I draw your attention to page 11 of the Mkt Risk Study Notes? Take a look at the third graphic titled "Weakening of Basis:"
Here we have 4 prices:
$4.00-- the Spot Price of asset today (e.g. Sep 1, 2008) -- Let's call this price S-1
$3.80-- the future price of asset today, say maturity on March 1, 2009. Let's call this price F-1
Moving on:
$4.20 -- the Spot of price on the maturity date, March 1, 2009 -- Call this S-2
$4.10 -- Future price of the hedge -- call this F-2
From your notes, I do understand that a weakening of the basis has occurred if:
(F-2 - F-1) > (S-2 - S-1), i.e. the futures price has increased at a faster rate than the spot price.
My questions here -- Let's assume I take a short hedge position on Sept 1, 2008.
2.1: I don't really understand what F-2 (the $4.10) price is? What is F-2 the price of? F1 is the price at which I am willing to sell the asset on March 1, 2009.
March 1, 2009 arrives. The "future" has arrived. And now the spot price of the asset is S2, i.e. 4.20. I get this. But what is F-2, $4.10. What "future" does F-2 refer to? We are already at the "future", i.e. March 1, 2009.
Please help me make sense out of this. The only sense I could make out of it is that F-2 is the spot price of the hedged asset -- and it can be different from S-2 only if the hedge is a cross-hedge.
Summary of the above ramble:
Do all the four prices refer to the same underlying asset?
Can you just indulge me and mark-off which price relates to which asset (e.g. underlying or hedge)
What is the difference between F-1 and F-2?
Sorry for this long post...Eagerly awaiting your response.
--sridhar
Couple of nagging ones (for me):
1. Does basis risk apply only in a cross-hedge? When the hedging asset (e.g. crude oil) is different from the underlying asset (e.g. jet fuel?)
2. I am a little confused about some of the prices used in the illustration of the basis risk. May I draw your attention to page 11 of the Mkt Risk Study Notes? Take a look at the third graphic titled "Weakening of Basis:"
Here we have 4 prices:
$4.00-- the Spot Price of asset today (e.g. Sep 1, 2008) -- Let's call this price S-1
$3.80-- the future price of asset today, say maturity on March 1, 2009. Let's call this price F-1
Moving on:
$4.20 -- the Spot of price on the maturity date, March 1, 2009 -- Call this S-2
$4.10 -- Future price of the hedge -- call this F-2
From your notes, I do understand that a weakening of the basis has occurred if:
(F-2 - F-1) > (S-2 - S-1), i.e. the futures price has increased at a faster rate than the spot price.
My questions here -- Let's assume I take a short hedge position on Sept 1, 2008.
2.1: I don't really understand what F-2 (the $4.10) price is? What is F-2 the price of? F1 is the price at which I am willing to sell the asset on March 1, 2009.
March 1, 2009 arrives. The "future" has arrived. And now the spot price of the asset is S2, i.e. 4.20. I get this. But what is F-2, $4.10. What "future" does F-2 refer to? We are already at the "future", i.e. March 1, 2009.
Please help me make sense out of this. The only sense I could make out of it is that F-2 is the spot price of the hedged asset -- and it can be different from S-2 only if the hedge is a cross-hedge.
Summary of the above ramble:
Do all the four prices refer to the same underlying asset?
Can you just indulge me and mark-off which price relates to which asset (e.g. underlying or hedge)
What is the difference between F-1 and F-2?
Sorry for this long post...Eagerly awaiting your response.
--sridhar