Finance:Fuel price risk management
Fuel price risk management, a specialization of both financial risk management and oil price analysis and similar to conventional risk management practice, is a continual cyclic process that includes risk assessment, risk decision making and the implementation of risk controls. It focuses primarily on when and how an organization can best hedge against exposure to fuel price volatility. It is generally referred to as "bunker hedging" in marine and shipping contexts and "fuel hedging" in aviation and trucking contexts.
Providers of fuel price risk management services
Fuel price risk management services are predominantly provided by specialist teams within fuel management companies, oil companies, financial institutions, utilities and trading companies. Examples include:
- Fuel management companies – Mercatus Energy Advisors, INTL FCStone, World Fuel Services, Onyx Capital Advisory, Global Risk Management
- Oil companies – Total S.A., Royal Dutch Shell, ExxonMobil, Koch Industries, BP
- Financial institutions – BNP Paribas, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Barclays plc, Macquarie Bank, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo
- Utilities – RWE Supply and Trading GmbH, EdF
- Independent trading companies – DRW, Optiver
The fuel price risk management process
Similar to conventional risk management practice,[1] fuel price risk management is considered a continual cyclic process that includes the following:
- 1 Establishing the context
- current and future business environment
- financial position and budgets
- objectives and needs
- required fuel consumption, etc.
- 2 Risk assessment
- fuel cost calculations
- risk identification
- the organization's attitude to risk
- exposure analysis to fuel price fluctuations
- scenarios of various hedging strategies
- 3 Risk treatment
- implementation of a fuel price risk strategy
- 4 Monitor and review
An alternative to the above described process is the following:[2]
- 1 Identify, analyze and quantify the fuel related risks
- 2 Determine tolerance for risk and develop a fuel price risk management policy
- 3 Develop fuel price risk management implementation strategies
- 4 Establish controls and procedures
- 5 Initial implementation of fuel price risk management strategies
- 6 Monitor, analyze and reporting
- 7 Repeat the process on as needed basis
Real investments as risk reduction
Energy efficiency measures can be seen as real capital investments that, in addition to reducing fuel costs, reduce exposure fuel price risk. As less fuel is consumed, a smaller cost component is susceptible to fluctuations in fuel prices. The value of this risk reduction can be calculated using the Tuominen-Seppänen method[3] and its value has been shown to be approximately 10 % compared to direct cost savings for a typical energy efficient building.[4]
See also
- Commodity markets
- Commodity risk
- Energy derivative
- Liquidity risk
- Market risk
- Risk modeling
Notes
- ↑ "Committee Draft of ISO 31000 Risk management". International Organization for Standardization. 15 June 2007. Archived on 25 March 2009. Error: If you specify
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. http://www.nsai.ie/uploads/file/N047_Committee_Draft_of_ISO_31000.pdf. Retrieved 12 September 2009. - ↑ "The Basic Building Blocks of A De Novo Fuel Hedging Program". Mercatus Energy Advisors. 7 November 2011. http://www.mercatusenergy.com/blog/bid/70410/The-Basic-Building-Blocks-of-A-De-Novo-Fuel-Hedging-Program. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
- ↑ B Baatz, J Barrett, B Stickles: Estimating the Value of Energy Efficiency to Reduce Wholesale Energy Price Volatility. ACEEE, Washington D.C., 2018.
- ↑ Tuominen, P., Seppänen, T. (2017): Estimating the Value of Price Risk Reduction in Energy Efficiency Investments in Buildings. Energies. Vol. 10, p. 1545.
References
- Crockford, Neil (1986). An Introduction to Risk Management (2 ed.). Woodhead-Faulkner. ISBN 0-85941-332-2.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuel price risk management.
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