Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/12906
metadata.ojs.dc.title: The Performance of U.S. Ethanol Futures Markets on the World Stage
metadata.ojs.dc.creator: Souza, Waldemar Antonio da Rocha de
Liu, Jingyu
Yang, Xiaoyi
Dahlgran, Roger
metadata.ojs.dc.subject: Brazilian ethanol
Hedging
Price risk
Exchange rate risk
Etanol - Mercados futuros
Risco de preço
Risco de taxa de câmbio
metadata.ojs.dc.publisher: Organizações Rurais & Agroindustriais
metadata.ojs.dc.date: 10-Jun-2016
metadata.ojs.dc.identifier.citation: SOUZA, W. A. da R. de; LIU, J.; YANG, X.; DAHLGRAN, R. The Performance of U.S. Ethanol Futures Markets on the World Stage. Organizações Rurais & Agroindustriais, Lavras, v. 18, n. 1, p. 13-24, jun. 2016.
metadata.ojs.dc.identifier: http://revista.dae.ufla.br/index.php/ora/article/view/836
metadata.ojs.dc.description: This study examines the feasibility of Brazilian ethanol dealers using the U.S. ethanol futures contracts as a price-risk managementvehicle. This application is appropriate given that the U.S. and Brazil are the world’s largest and second largest ethanol producers.This specific application is part of a larger consideration as to how U.S. futures markets perform for hedging international commodities.This study considers the reasons why U.S. ethanol contracts might and might not work as hedging vehicles for Brazilian ethanolinventories prior to conducting an empirical investigation. Our empirical hedge ratio model formulates three components of pricerisk for international users of U.S. futures markets. These are (1) the risk of commodity price change given the initial currencyexchange rate, (2) the risk of exchange rate change, given the commodity’s initial price, and (3) the risk of covariation between thecommodity’s price and the currency exchange rate. Based on these sources of price risk, the hedging portfolio consists of the U.S.ethanol futures contract and the Brazilian real futures contract. Our analysis reveals that the U.S. ethanol futures contract provideslittle price-risk protection for Brazilian ethanol holder while the Brazilian real futures contract offers some protection. In contract,we present results from crude oil futures markets in which the U.S. crude oil futures contract gives the bulk of price risk protectionand the currency futures contract provides much less. We conclude (1) that the ethanol findings are not universal and depend onthe provisions of the U.S. ethanol futures contract and (2) the contracts traded on the Brazilian futures exchange do not competedirectly with the U.S. contracts.
metadata.ojs.dc.language: eng
Appears in Collections:Organizações Rurais & Agroindustriais

Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.