wrongsaidfred
Member
Hi David,
The basic idea of a stack and roll makes sense when the market is in normal backwardation. Getting long contracts that are two or three months out, riding the curve up and re-establishing. What I cannot wrap my head around is a statement in McDonald concerning the stack and roll.
"You might decide that the forward curve looks unusally steep in the early months. If you undertake a stack hedge and the forward curve then flattens, you will have locked in all of your oil at the relatively cheap near term price, and implicitly made gains from not having locked in the relatively high strip prices."
The first thing is, when he says "the curve flattens" does he have have to specify about which end it is pivoting? It seems a little arbitrary. In this case, I assume this means that the VERY near term does not move at all and the curve "pivots" around this near term price so that longer term forward prices come closer to approaching short term prices.
This might be getting a little overly technical, but if the forward market is in backwardation, pivots around the short end and then inverts, would this be considered a steepening as is goes further into contango? In other words, does the jargon apply so that "flattening" always means just approaching horizontal or can it mean something else?
Second, I do not see how this would mean that he saves money by not locking in the expensive strip prices. If a curve is in backwardation and flattens out (especially around the short term end of the curve) it seems like long term forward prices would be getting more expensive and that he would have been better off getting the strip.
Any clarification you could provide would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Mike
The basic idea of a stack and roll makes sense when the market is in normal backwardation. Getting long contracts that are two or three months out, riding the curve up and re-establishing. What I cannot wrap my head around is a statement in McDonald concerning the stack and roll.
"You might decide that the forward curve looks unusally steep in the early months. If you undertake a stack hedge and the forward curve then flattens, you will have locked in all of your oil at the relatively cheap near term price, and implicitly made gains from not having locked in the relatively high strip prices."
The first thing is, when he says "the curve flattens" does he have have to specify about which end it is pivoting? It seems a little arbitrary. In this case, I assume this means that the VERY near term does not move at all and the curve "pivots" around this near term price so that longer term forward prices come closer to approaching short term prices.
This might be getting a little overly technical, but if the forward market is in backwardation, pivots around the short end and then inverts, would this be considered a steepening as is goes further into contango? In other words, does the jargon apply so that "flattening" always means just approaching horizontal or can it mean something else?
Second, I do not see how this would mean that he saves money by not locking in the expensive strip prices. If a curve is in backwardation and flattens out (especially around the short term end of the curve) it seems like long term forward prices would be getting more expensive and that he would have been better off getting the strip.
Any clarification you could provide would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Mike