Abstract

Earnings of energy firms are exposed to a joint risk of energy price and energy consumption. The correlated fluctuations in both price and consumption present a joint risk of price and volume for a load-serving entity (LSE). In order to manage such a joint risk, LSEs take positions in a variety of hedging contracts. Among these financial instruments, we analyze the use of electricity-temperature quantity-adjusting (quanto) contracts. In this paper, we consider an LSE that has access to electricity price derivatives, temperature derivatives, and energy quanto contracts. We derive the closed-form optimal hedging positions in these contracts and the optimal mean-variance tradeoff, from an analytic model that we develop within the Constant Absolute Risk Aversion (CARA)-normal setting. We mathematically prove that the use of quanto contracts allows an LSE to lower its revenue volatility. Furthermore, our model offers novel economic insights into the application of energy quanto contracts to hedging practice. First, we document and quantify the “dirty hedge” of standardized price and temperature derivatives in the absence of tailor-made energy quanto contracts. Second, we derive a threshold price of energy quanto contracts. If an energy quanto contract is quoted above this threshold price, an LSE shall not trade such a contract for risk management purposes. Third, this paper investigates a questionable, yet commonly adopted practice of using temperature as a perfect proxy for power consumption.

Highlights

  • Earnings of energy firms are exposed to a joint risk of energy price and energy consumption

  • These adjustments in hedging positions reflect the need to use standardized price and temperature derivatives to mimic the function of energy quanto contracts

  • We develop an analytic hedging model of energy quanto contracts and investigate several interesting hedging issues related to the application of such financial instruments

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Summary

Introduction

Earnings of energy firms are exposed to a joint risk of energy price and energy consumption. In order to manage such a joint risk, LSEs take positions in a variety of hedging contracts Among these financial instruments, this paper is interested in the use of electricity-temperature quantity-adjusting (quanto) contracts. Payoffs of price derivatives are driven by floating wholesale prices (W) in the power markets As a result, these contracts lock in price risks for this LSE. The common contract size of electricity price derivatives is 25 Mega-Watts, and the cash settlements of temperature derivatives have a notional value of $20 per HDD or CDD tick Unlike these standardized instruments, energy quanto contracts are tailor-made hedging deals. Energy quanto contracts are tailor-made hedging deals The payoffs of such contracts are driven by the product of energy prices and temperature indices. It is not a surprise that hedging using energy quanto contracts is more effective than that using standardized price and temperature derivatives (e.g., [1])

Economic Setting
The Main Results
W ρD2 L
Numerical Examples
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