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2012 Fuel Hedging at JetBlue Airways

Publication date: 20 January 2017

Abstract

In early 2012, an equity analyst, was examining the jet fuel hedging strategy of JetBlue Airways for the coming year. Because airlines cross-hedged their jet fuel price risk using derivatives contracts on other oil products such as WTI and Brent crude oil, they were exposed to basis risk. In 2011, dislocations in the oil market led to a Brent-WTI premium wherein jet fuel started to move with Brent instead of WTI, as it traditionally did. Faced with hedging losses, several U.S. airlines started to change their hedging strategies, moving away from WTI. But others worried that the Brent-WTI premium might be a temporary phenomenon. For 2012, would JetBlue continue using WTI for its hedges, or would it switch to an alternative such as Brent?

Keywords

Citation

Matos, P. (2017), "2012 Fuel Hedging at JetBlue Airways", . https://doi.org/10.1108/case.darden.2016.000003

Publisher

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University of Virginia Darden School Foundation

Copyright © 2013 by the University of Virginia Darden School Foundation, Charlottesville, VA. All rights reserved.

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