With this ultimate form of corruption how could anyone restrain themselves from weather modification? - especially if there is money to be made.
Weather
Derivatives: Hedging on Mother Nature
For
some industries, the weather plays a significant role in determining
revenue. Unexpected weather events can often cause significant
financial losses. For instance, a drought can yield a severe impact
on an agribusiness’ amount and quality of produce; unseasonably
mild winters can similarly diminish the profit margins of utility
companies. So, how can companies – particularly those at the mercy
of Mother Nature – protect themselves against the elements and
limit their exposure to financial risk?
19
April, 2012
Increasingly,
companies have been managing weather risk by using derivatives, which
provide the means for businesses to protect themselves against
adverse financial affects that are due to variations in climate.
According to industry body, the
Weather Risk Management Association, trading volume of weather
derivatives in 2010-2011 increased
by 20 percent on the previous year.
How
it Works
Derivative
contracts generally represent a contract to trade a specified
quantity of an underlying asset, at an agreed price and time. By
making a payment to a separate company that will assume the financial
weather risk for them, organizations are buying a type of insurance:
the company assuming the risk will pay the purchaser a pre-set amount
of money that will correspond to the loss or cost increase caused by
the disruptive weather. As such, risk exposure can be managed in a
wide range of settings.
Weather
derivatives derive their value from climatic conditions such as
temperature, snowfall, hurricanes or rainfall. An important set of
contracts traded at CME Group are temperature-based futures
contracts. Contracts are offered for trade based on the temperature
across a range of U.S., European and Australian cities such as
Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne.
The
most common of these contracts come in the form of either Heating
Degree Day (HDD) or Cooling Degree Day (CDD) contracts. The payoff of
these contracts is based on the cumulated difference in daily
temperatures relative to 18⁰C (about 64⁰F) over a fixed period
such as a month. The fixed level of 18⁰C is the temperature at
which the energy sector believes little heating or cooling occurs in
households. The buyer of a HDD or CDD contract benefits from a
positive payoff if cumulative temperature is below or above a
specified level. While this nomenclature may seem counter-intuitive,
heating (or cooling) occurs when temperatures are lower (higher).
Major
participants in this market include utilities and insurance
companies, whose costs and or revenues are dependent upon weather
conditions. In an Australian setting, an electricity supplier
normally provides its customers with electricity at a fixed price
irrespective of the wholesale price in the National Electricity
Market. However, the wholesale price of electricity can fluctuate
wildly with extreme weather conditions. CDD contracts can provide a
hedging tool for such fluctuations in electricity prices in the
wholesale market during periods of extremely high temperatures.
Similar arguments apply in the northern hemisphere, where utilities
face risk from increased demand during periods of low temperatures
and hence HDD contracts are a natural hedging tool.
Pricing
Weather
Futures
on traditional assets such as stocks, bonds, agricultural and most
energy products are priced under the cost of carry approach. The
logic of this approach is that there are two alternatives for
obtaining the asset in question at some point in the future. These
are either, borrow to purchase it now and store the asset, or agree
to purchase the asset at that later date via a futures contract.
Under the absence of arbitrage, the cost of both approaches should be
equivalent. Hence the current cost of a futures contract is related
to the current price of the asset and the cost of borrowing and
storing the asset. This arbitrage-free valuation approach is a simple
yet common method for pricing many financial securities.
Weather
derivatives have also gained research attention in academic circles
as they represent a unique pricing problem. The cost of carry method
is based on the possibility of storing, or holding the underlying
asset. However, in the case of weather contracts such as HDD or CDD,
the underlying asset is not storable in any meaningful way.
As
such, the cost of carry approach is not relevant and pricing is based
on a discounted value of the payoff from the futures contract. A
statistical model is required to generate the possible range of
outcomes that the underlying weather index may take and subsequent
payoffs ensuing from the derivatives contract. The discount rate will
be market determined given the prices for contracts that the market
will bear.
Weather
derivatives are of great economic importance in that they allow
participants to manage a very specific form of risk. While weather
futures contracts currently make up a relatively small proportion of
trading in derivatives markets, it is a sector that is experiencing
rapid growth – particularly as more companies recognize the
correlation between weather and profit.
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