Long Hedge

From CEOpedia | Management online
Revision as of 17:26, 1 December 2019 by Sw (talk | contribs) (Infobox update)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Long Hedge
See also

Long Hedge is known as a hedge fund managing and distributing funds for talking long positions in future contracts. It involves the purchase of certain assets to reduce the fear of the price increase in the future. The hedge itself is quite simple, with the purchaser of a commodity simply entering a long future position. A company knows that it is due to buy an asset that in the future can hedge by taking a long futures position. The long hedge is initiated when a future contract is purchased in order to reduce the price variability of an anticipated future long position. Equivalently a long hedge locks up the interest rate of price of the cash security that will be purchased in the future subject to small adjustment due to the basis risk. The primary objective of the long hedge is to benefit from the high long term interest rates, even though funds are not currently available for investment. A long hedge is also known as an anticipatory hedge, because it is effectively a substitute position for a future cash transaction[1].

Disadvantages of long hedge

The disadvantages of long hedge[2]:

  • Financial institutions are prohibited from employing long hedges, since their regulatory agencies believe that long hedges are similar to speculation, and these agencies do not want institutions to be tempted into affecting the institution's return with highly leveraged speculative futures positions.
  • If the financial manager inaccurately forecast the way of the future interest rates, then the company still locks up the futures yield rather than fully participating in the higher returns available because of the greater interest rate
  • If the futures market already anticipate a collapse in interest rates similar to the decrease forecasted by financial manager, then the futures price reflects this lower rate, negating any return benefit from the long hedge. Particularly, one hedges only against unanticipated changes that the futures market has not yet forecasted. If the eventual cash price increases only to a level below the current futures rice, then a loss occurs on the long hedge. Therefore, a progress in return from a long hedge in comparison to the future cash market investment occurs only if the manager is a superior forecast of the future interest rates. Nevertheless, long hedge does lock-in the currently available long-term futures rate, thereby reducing the risk of unanticipated changes in the rate.
  • If rates rise instead, to drop down then bond prices will decline causing an immediate cash outflow due to margin calls. This cash outflow will be offset only over the life of the bond via a greater yield on investment. Thus the net investment decision.

Difference between long and short hedge

Basis risk makes it very difficult to offset all pricing risk, but a high hedge ratio on a long hedge will remove a lot of it. The opposite of a long hedge is a short hedge, which protects the seller of a commodity or assets by locking in the sale price. Hedges, both long and short, can be thought of as a form of insurance. There is a cost to set them up, but they can save a company a large amount in an adverse situation[3].

Long hedge[4]:

  • requires taking a long position in the futures contract
  • appropriate when a certain asset or commodity would be purchased in the future and one is interested in locking in the price now

Short hedge[5]:

  • involves a short position in the future contract
  • applicable when a hedger already owns an asset and expects to sell it in the future

Footnotes

  1. B. Mishra (2009), s. 97
  2. B. Mishra (2009), s. 98
  3. S. Janakiramanan (2007), s. 101-111
  4. G. Kleinman (2013), chapter 4
  5. G. Kleinman (2013), chapter 4

References

Author: Anna Marczyk