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Agro Products: Spread Strategies &
Basis Pricing
2014-10
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Contents
I. Agro Products: Spread Strategies
II. Agro Products: Basis Pricing
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I. Agro Products: Spread Strategies
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Spread trading:
Spread trading means to buy or sell a futures contract (commodity)
and sell or buy another related futures contract (commodity) at the
same time, and then close positions for both contracts
(commodities) simultaneously at sometime in the future.
Spread trading utilizes the unreasonable spread between different
markets or different commodities to gain profit at low risk levels.
Spread trading utilizes unreasonable spread and turns it
reasonable through the trading.
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Types of spread trading:
Calendar spread
Inter-commodity spread
Inter-exchange spread
Arbitrage
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Calendar spread: to buy in or sell out futures contracts of the same
commodity or in the same exchange but with different delivery months,
and gain profit from the changing spread between the contracts.
Holding cost strategy: the spread between contracts of the same commodity
but different delivery months exceeds the holding cost
This strategy is affected by delivery system (generation and cancellation of warehouse
receipts), capital interest and warehouse cost. Warehouse receipt financing offered by
exchanges lowers the market threshold, such as the rape oil contracts to be delivered in
September 2014 and January 2015.
Bull spread: typically in a bull market, the price markup of near month
(dominant) contracts is higher than that of far month contracts, so we long near
month contracts and short far month contracts.
The timing is determined by analyzing the S&D trends and cost structures of the two
contracts. An example is the long near and short far trading of soymeal contracts in
recent years.
Bear spread: typically in a bear market, the price drop of near month
(dominant) contracts is higher than that of far month contracts, so we short near
month contracts and long far month contracts.
The timing is still determined by analyzing the S&D trends of the two contracts, with a
focus on near month contract. Soymeal contracts to be delivered in May and September
2014 are good examples.
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Inter-commodity spread: to utilize the strong correlation
commodities e.g. the complementarity or substitutability
between some certain to gain profit through reverse
operations between these commodities.
Substitutability-based inter-commodity spread: price correlation
occurs when different commodities have substitutability or
competition coorelation in terms of functionality or acreage. We can
utilize the excessive deviation of the relative price and spread
between these commodities.
For example, soymeal and rapeseed meal are substitutable to each other,
different vegetable oils are substitutable to each other, soybean and corn
compete with each other for acreage, etc.
Industry chain spread: correlation exists between commodities in
the same industry chain due to the effect of cost and profit.
Crush spread between domestic and international markets, a type of spread
trading combining inter-commodity and inter-exchange features.
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Inter-exchange spread: to buy in (or sell out) a
commodity contract in an exchange and sell out (or buy
in) the same contract in another exchange.
Import spread: the spread between domestic and international
markets utilizing the changing import profits of soy oil, palm oil, etc.
Others: spread between different wheat varieties traded in three
American exchanges, the underlying logic is based on the S&D of
these varieties.
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Arbitrage: to gain profit from the unreasonable spread
between futures and spot of the same commodity.
Forward arbitrage: when the premium between futures and spot
exceeds the holding cost.
Examples: palm oil and soy oil traded in domestic exchanges.
Arbitrage incorporating presales:
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Risks related to spread trading
Risk in capital management
“The market irrationality may last much longer than your capital adequacy.”
- Keynes
Changes in spread range
Changes in fundamentals or macroeconomic situation usually triggers
changes in spread range. Analyzing the fundamentals is necessary for
spread trading based on historical statistics.
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II. Agro Products: Basis Pricing
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Hedging: profit locking and basis
speculation
Futures price reflects forward price expected by investors;
Delivery system ensures the final convergence of futures price and spot
price;
Function of futures hedging – the buyer locks his cost by buying in advance,
and the seller locks his price by selling in advance;
Let’s take the seller as an example: can he really sell his contract at the
locked price?
Futures price ≈ spot price, but it only realizes when the futures contract is to
be or being delivered;
What’s the actual price you’ll get when you can’t hold positions till delivery?
Can you still lock your profit?
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Final convergence of futures and spot
with a dynamic process
Price
Futures price
Logistics and
delivery cost
Convergence
insured by
delivery
system
Local spot price
Maturity
Let’s take the seller as an example: can he really sell his contract at the
locked price?
Futures price ≈ spot price, but it only realizes when the futures contract is
to be or being delivered;
What’s the actual price you’ll get when you can’t hold positions till
delivery? Can you still lock your profit?
Problem:
before maturity
Futures price ≠
spot price
Profit locking and basis
speculation
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Concept 1: hedging means profit locking;
Concept 2: hedging is essentially a basis speculation;
Seem to be different; how to align these two concepts?
Formally aligned: hedging profit is basically the spread between futures price
and spot price, and the basis between futures and spot is the ultimate form,
the only question is positive or negative.
Substantially aligned: hedging provides an access mode for basis
speculators with the safest margin. When the profit is locked, a basis
speculator is able to realize part or all of his locked profit even if he is
exposed to relevant risks. On the other hand, if loss is locked, a basis
speculator must be careful with the direction of his speculation, otherwise all
he will get upon delivery is loss when exposed to relevant risks.
Difference: hedging aimed to lock profit is a basis speculation with certainty;
while hedging without locking profit is a basis speculation with uncertainty
(also known as trend hedging).
Why spot traders need basis
speculation
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Premium/ basis
Basis = local spot price – futures price
Futures: macro supply & demand with higher volatility - Floor pit
Basis: micro market with lower volatility - Local market
Basis reflects local supply and demand in spot market. Basis trend analysis:
seasonal analysis + characteristics of natural convergence + spot forecast
Factors affecting basis: freight cost, logistic conditions, local spot S&D
(market competition, policies, weather, harvest progress, farmer sales, local
stock), product quality, warehouse cost and availability, S&D of substitute
product, price expectation, etc.
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