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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Optimal hedging under biased energy futures markets
Dolores FurióHipòlit Torrósubject
Economics and EconometricsRisk aversion020209 energyEnergy (esotericism)05 social sciences02 engineering and technologyGeneral Energy0502 economics and business0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringEconometricsEconomicsHedge ratio050207 economicsFutures contractExpected utility hypothesisdescription
Abstract Optimal futures hedging positions for those agents trying to maximize their expected utility will depend on their view about the evolution of the market and on how risk adverse they are. The most risk adverse agents will probably decide to full-cover their positions. But when a futures bias exists, hedgers with moderate or low degree of risk aversion can alter their strategy depending on the expected gains in futures markets. In our application to the UK natural gas market, we find a statistically significant time-varying negative futures bias that can be forecasted with confidence. As a result of this bias, most effective and best performing hedging strategies for moderate risk-averse agents are those involving short (long) hedging in winter (summer) with a hedging ratio above (below) the minimum variance hedge ratio. These findings are of great interest to practitioners in the UK natural gas markets and the methodology can be extrapolated to other energy markets.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-05-01 | Energy Economics |