4: Commodities Flashcards
3 elements of cost of carry
Financing cost, storage cost and spoilage cost
Normal backwardation vs backwardation
Normal backwardation is when the futures price is less than the expected futures price. This is an unobservable phenomenon.
Backwardation is when the futures price is less then the observable current spot price. Note that is a downward tending term structure.
Note that normal backwardation can exist in backwardated or contangoed markets.
What is the relationship between geometric mean and standard deviation?
The equation is Geometric mean = Arithmetic Mean - Variance/2
A portfolio that displays good diversification will tend to have less variance and consequently less standard deviation. Thus, this portfolio will have a higher geometric mean.
What are the main types of commodity spreads?
- Time Spreads
- Calendar Spreads (ex: Bull Spread, Bear Spread)
- Correlation Spreads
- Processing Spreads (ex: Crush Spread, Crack Spread)
- Substitution Spreads (these are harder to implement)
- Location Spreads
Methods of obtaining indirect ownership of commodities
- Commodity Index Swaps (preferred method)
- Public commodity based equities (stock market risk)
- Bonds issued by commodity firms
- Commodity based mutual funds and ETFs
- Public and private Commodity Partnerships (ex: MLPs, these behave like REITs)
- Commodity debt instruments (ex: index linked notes, exchange traded funds)
- Commodity based HFs
- Commodity trade financing and production financing
What is a commodity index linked note?
It’s a debt instrument that provides repayment of principle and a return linked to a fully collateralized index. Nite that this index collaterization is done with very low paying vehicles such as T Bills, money market instruments etc.
CILNs are more expensive than a commodity index swap but offers these 3 advantages:
- Smaller minimum capital requirement
- No need for collateral, because the note is fully collateralized
- An active secondary market, unlike SWAPs, keeps liquidity concerns low
Commodities returns and the business cycle
- commodities and equites generally perform similarly during the growth and expansion phase of the business cycle. However, the performances differ based on the phase of recession or expansion. Commodities outperform stocks/bonds in the late expansion and early recession phases
- note that commodities perform well in the early phase of the recession and poorly in the later phase
3 ways to stress test a commodities portfolio
- Randomly shift forward curves and observe change in portfolio NAV
- Shock the commodities’ FME with different correlations and observe change in portfolio NAV
- Stimulate price movements to mimic historical event
6 effective risk management measures for commodity investments
- Estimate NAV
- Measure event risks
- Stress test using VAR
- Measure liquidity risks
- Performance attribution
- Mitigate operational risks
Observations about risk relevant to commodities, stocks and bonds
In terms of volatility, as measured by SD, stocks>commodities>bonds
Stocks are negatively skewed while commodity futures and bonds are slightly positively skewed
All 3 asset classes exhibit positive kurtosis, therefore, the returns cannot be fully measured by measures such as mean and SD
Crack Spread
Long crude oil futures and short gasoline and heating oil futures
Crush Spread
Long Soybean futures and short soybean oil and soybean meal futures
Article C takeaways
- financialization and structural changes reduced risk premiums.
- increased activity is attributed to electronic trading, improved market access (from financial innovation), and new passive market participants (such as institutions and pensions)
- both open interest and trading volume increased a lot
- participation by small, non-reporting traders reduced a lot
What is a commodity index swap?
- primary vehicles used by investors to gain exposure to commodity indices
- one party makes a payment based on the price of a commodity index and the other party makes a payment based on an interest rate
- no upfront capital required and the investors can manage the collateral posted, this aspect is better than say a commodity index linked note where the collateral posted would be earning something close to a risk free rate
- drawbacks:
limited to large creditworthy investors
illiquid secondary markets which demands heavy negotiations to amend or terminate a swap, so SWAPs have more counterparty risk exposure than commodity futures
3 main theories about the shape of commodity forward curves
- Rational expectations hypothesis: the price of an asset for future delivery should be the same as the market’s current forecast of the spot price of the asset on the future delivery date
- Normal Backwardation (Keynes): futures prices trade at prices below the rational expectations price
- Preferred Habitat Hypothesis: bond producers want long maturities and bond consumers (lenders) want short maturities. Producers offer attractive yields, via low bond prices, to entice lenders to extend their maturity or induce speculators to borrow at short maturities and lend at long maturities