Determining the effectiveness of optimal time-varying hedge ratios for cattle feeders under multiproduct and single commodity settings
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to determine and contrast the risk mitigating effectiveness from optimal multiproduct time-varying hedge ratios, applied to the margin of a cattle feedlot operation, over single commodity time-varying and naive hedge ratios.
Design/methodology/approach
A parsimonious regime-switching dynamic correlations (RSDC) model is estimated in two-stages, where the dynamic correlations among prices of numerous commodities vary proportionally between two different regimes/levels. This property simplifies estimation methods for a large number of parameters involved.
Findings
There is significant evidence that resulting simultaneous correlations among the prices (spot and futures) for each commodity attain different levels along the time-series. Second, for in and out-of-sample data there is a substantial reduction in the operation's margin variance provided from both multiproduct and single time-varying optimal hedge ratios over naive hedge ratios. Lastly, risk mitigation is attained at a lower cost given that average optimal multiproduct and single time-varying hedge ratios obtained for corn, feeder cattle and live cattle are significantly below the naive full hedge ratio.
Research limitations/implications
The application studied is limited in that once a hedge position has been set at a particular period, it is not possible to modify or update at a subsequent period.
Practical implications
Agricultural producers, specifically cattle feeders, may profit from a tool using improved techniques to determine hedge ratios by considering a larger amount of up-to-date information. Moreover, these agents may apply hedge ratios significantly lower than one and thus mitigate risk at lower costs.
Originality/value
Feedlot operators will benefit from the potential implementation of this parsimonious RSDC model for their hedging operations, as it provides average optimal hedge ratios significantly lower than one and sizeable advantages in margin risk mitigation.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
Authors would like to thank participants from the Second Annual International Risk, Finance and Insurance Conference for valuable comments.
Citation
Tejeda, H. and Feuz, D. (2014), "Determining the effectiveness of optimal time-varying hedge ratios for cattle feeders under multiproduct and single commodity settings", Agricultural Finance Review, Vol. 74 No. 2, pp. 217-235. https://doi.org/10.1108/AFR-11-2013-0038
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited