FMP11 - Commodity Forwards and Futures Flashcards
Explain key differences between commodities and financial assets
- Storage costs for financial assets almost zero, cam be substantial for commodities
- Commodities can be costly to transport so price varies by location
- Lease charge for shorting commodities far exceeds that for financials
- Most commodities have a price that is mean reverting
Define and apply commodity concepts such as storage costs, carry markets, lease rate, and convenience yield
- Storage costs: how much it costs to keep the asset, considered negative income
- Lease rate: interest rate charged to borrow the asset
- Convenience yield: where consumer has commodity stored ready for use
Identify factors that impact prices on agricultural commodities, metals, energy, and weather derivatives
Agricultural:
- prices can be seasonal
- expected weather affecting harvest
- politics
Metals:
- FX rates can affect
- Availability
Energy:
- very seasonal
Explain the formula for pricing commodity forwards
Same as normal forwards but treat lease rate as Q if no storage costs (known income forward) and remove storage costs from S (so term becomes S-U) for known yield case, convenience yield is Q
Define lease rate and explain how it determines the no-arbitrage values for commodity forwards and futures
Interest rate charged to borrow underlying asset
Describe the cost of carry model and determine the impact of storage costs and convenience yields on commodity forwards prices and no-arbitrage bounds
Cost of carry reflects impact of storage, financing, income earned on the asset.
C = ((1 + R) / (1 + Q)) - 1, R-Q if continuous
Increasing yield means smaller cost of carry, increasing storage costs increases C
Compute the forward price of a commodity with storage costs
F = (S - U) * ((1 + R) / (1 + y))^T,
U is the present value of storage costs
Explain how to create a synthetic commodity position and use it to explain the relationship between the forward price and the expected future spot price
Invest P = F / (1 + R)^T at the risk free rate and enter into long futures contract to buy the asset for F at time T to create synthetic position
Explain the impact of systematic and non-systematic risk on current futures and expected futures spot prices
E(St) = P(1 + X)^T where X is expected return
Systematic risk of an investment depends on correlation between underlying asset return and market return
- correlation positive means X > R and E(St) > F
- correlation negative means X < R and E(St) < F
Define and interpret normal backwardation and contango
- if F < E(St) then normal backwardation
- if F > E(St) then contango