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GMS Projects

Khon Kaen University International College Business in the Greater Mekong Sub-region Course number 050 451 - Second semester 2013 Wednesdays at 9:00 in room 823 Lecturer: Michael Cooke office room 817 E-mail: Michco@kku.ac.th Web: KKU.AC.TH/Michco. GMS Projects.

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GMS Projects

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  1. Khon Kaen University International CollegeBusiness in the Greater Mekong Sub-regionCourse number 050 451 - Second semester 2013Wednesdays at 9:00 in room 823Lecturer: Michael Cookeoffice room 817E-mail: Michco@kku.ac.thWeb: KKU.AC.TH/Michco

  2. GMS Projects • Find a successful industry in GMS, or one which shows potential to be successful (13 Nov) • Explore reasons the industry located in GMS • What is the nature of the business (capital or labor intensive, etc) • Any spillover effects? • What was the mode of entry for the businesses? • Study a GMS country in which the industry is successful (4 Dec) • What are the strengths of that country from a business perspective? • What are the weaknesses? • Look for barriers to further business success in the country • How do you see the business evolving (5 Feb) • Effect of ASEAN or other alliances (trade, labor mobility, etc) • Relevant demographic, economic, trade projections • Infrastructure, education, and other changes as a result of government or business initiatives • Advice you would give to government units to encourage industry growth

  3. Mekong Watershed36% of the River’s Volume is from Laos

  4. Mekong River Commission Secretariat

  5. Resources • JETRO (Japan External Trade Organization) established 1958 helps small to medium size Japanese firms maximize their global export potential • JETRO-Institute of Developing Economies (IDE) Bangkok Research Center links • http://www.ide.go.jp/English/Links/southeast_asia.html • Good for links to government and university sites for the GMS countries • Institute of Developing Economies (IDE) Bangkok Research Center publications • http://www.ide.go.jp/English/Publish/Download/Brc/ • Relevant and relatively recent research reports • Examples: • "Five Triangle Areas in the Greater Mekong Subregion" Edited by ISHIDA Masami / Published in 2013 • "Economic Reforms in Myanmar: Pathways and Prospects" Edited by HANK LIM and YASUHIRO YAMADA / Published 2013 • "Cause and Consequence of FIRMS' FTA Utilization in Asia" Edited by HAYAKAWA Kazunobu / Published in 2012 • "Emerging Economic Corridors in the Mekong Region" Edited by ISHIDA Masami / Published in 2012 • "Industrial Readjustment in the Mekong River Basin Countries: Toward the AEC" Edited by Yasushi UEKI AND TEERANA BHONGMAKAPAT / Published in 2012 • "Investment Climate of Major Cities in CLMV Countries" Edited by ISHIDA Masami / Published in 2010 • "Economic Relations of China, Japan and Korea with the Mekong River Basin Countries (MRBCs)" Edited by KAGAMI Mitsuhiro / Published in 2010 • "Major Industries and Business Chance in CLMV Countries" Edited by UCHIKAWA Shuji / Published in 2009 • "A China-Japan Comparison of Economic Relationships with the Mekong River Basin Countries" Edited by KAGAMI MItsuhiro / Published in 2009 • Mekong Institute (on the KKU Campus) http://www.mekonginstitute.org/

  6. Mekong Institute Focus on Labor • http://www.mekonginstitute.org/images/abook_file/policy_brief_labour_supply.pdf • From a study of a Laos SEZ: “The breakdown in occupational skills indicate mismatches in supply and demand for specific skills areas such as IT/computer operators, maintenance mechanics, welders, sewers/dressmakers, gem lapicides, and others. On the other hand, majority of students at TVET schools enroll in accountancy and Business management courses.” • From a study of a Cambodian SEZ: “The new SEZs that have been set up in the border areas with Thailand and Vietnam have reduced the pull factor to migrate to Phnom Penh for work. The preference of students for enrolling in academic courses such as management and accounting due to the perception that vocational training will lead to a career of hard labor and low wages in factories. In Laos, many prefer to migrate to Thailand where they can earn more even without the necessary educational credentials.”

  7. GMS Corridor Map – East-West

  8. GMS Corridors – High Level Source: Chiang Mai University USER 2007

  9. SE Asia Trade routes from East Asia to South Asia, the Middle East, and the Suez Canal pass through the Straits of Malacca, northwest of Singapore. The area is a haven for pirates. In November two large tankers were hijacked there. The East-West corridor would connect East Asia to the Indian Ocean well north of the Straits.

  10. Why did floods in Bangkok affect a company based in Minnesota? And why are we talking about this small American company again?

  11. Thailand is the 2nd largest producer of hard drives; producing over 25% of total drives made. An ecosystem of component suppliers has formed near the assembly operations of companies like Seagate and Western Digital. Nidec makes HDD motors and other small electric motors at 10 factories in Thailand.

  12. Indigenous Firms as Suppliers http://www.ide.go.jp/English/Publish/Download/Brc/pdf/12_10.pdf • Foreign firms experience the highest added productivity when buying from suppliers of the same nationality in the host country • An American HDD maker will tend to buy from an American supplier in Thailand • The HDD supplier, such as Hutchinson, may employ local managers • Purchasing supplies from indigenous firms adds less value in part due to quality issues – on average across many developing markets, foreign firms are better performers • Host country firms must raise quality of their output to the level of foreign firms • When indigenous firms raise skills and quality, more foreign firms will invest • This results in positive spillovers to the host country • Older overseas affiliates of foreign firms may have higher indigenous firm content due to better knowledge of local suppliers • Weak local currency tends to promote higher indigenous content due to price advantages, especially for firms that intend to export from the host country • Over time spillovers from foreign firms to indigenous firms occurs • Imitating superior products and technologies • Direct skills and technologies transfer • Competition from foreign firms causes indigenous firms to raise standards • Indigenous firms learn how to penetrate export markets

  13. Venezuela’s New President • Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro recently jailed more than 100 “bourgeois” businessmen, in what he calls an “economic war” on alleged unfair pricing. • In early November, the president sent soldiers to seize electronic stores he has accused of unjustified price rises, hoarding and speculation • Bargain hunters then flooded the shops and some looting was reported. • Inspectors have been dispatched to about 1,400 other businesses. Mr Maduro picked out US manufacturer Goodyear, demanding price reductions. • Promising to step up an “economic offensive”, Mr Maduro said that he would set caps on business profit margins and extend controls to establish “fair” prices. “They are barbaric, these capitalist parasites,” he said. • Mr Maduro inherited economic problems from Hugo Chávez. • Policy paralysis has led to dwindling hard currency reserves and galloping inflation of 54 per cent. • There are rampant shortages of food and goods, which economists attribute to currency market distortions. • Price controls and strict currency exchange restrictions have generated a scarcity of dollars to pay for imports in the oil-rich nation, with • Venezuelans use the black market for dollars, which cost nearly 10 times the official rate • Would businesses have similar risks in the GMS? Financial Times, Nov 15th, 2013

  14. 'Currency Carry Trade' • A carry trade is a strategy in which an investor borrows at a low interest rate to invest in an asset that is likely to provide a higher return. • In the foreign exchange market an investor sells a currency with a relatively low interest rate and invests in a different currency with a higher interest rate. • A person using this strategy attempts to capture the difference between the interest rates, and often magnifies the difference with leverage used. • Prior to 2007, low interest rates in Japan were a source of carry trade flows • Destinations for carry trade flows were Australia and NZ (where interest rates were high) • When global interest rates converged in 2008 the yen appreciated and the trade diminished • An example of a "yen carry trade": • Borrow 1,000 Japanese yen from a Japanese bank. • Convert the funds into U.S. dollars and buy a bond for the equivalent amount. • If the bond pays 4.5% and the Japanese interest rate is set at 0% you make a profit of 4.5% as long as the exchange rate between the countries does not change. • Professional traders (and Japanese housewives) use this trade because the gains can become very large with leverage. If the trader in this example uses a common leverage factor of 10:1, then she can stand to make a profit of 45%. • The risk in a carry trade is the uncertainty of exchange rates. • Using the example above, if the U.S. dollar were to fall in value relative to the Japanese yen, then the trader would run the risk of losing money. • When the transactions are done with leverage a small movement in exchange rates can result in huge losses. • From the perspective of a target country borrower, carry trade money is ‘hot money’ • A risk for many SE Asian countries is a rise of US interest rates – and the resulting flows Definition and illustration from: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/currencycarrytrade.asp and the Financial Times

  15. Stock Exchange in Cambodia • The Cambodia Securities Exchange (CSX) opened in April, 2012 • Money had been banned under the Khmer Rouge regime that tore Cambodia apart between 1975 and 1979 • After a $20MM IPO, Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority shares (PPWSA), rose 50 percent in the inaugural session (six months later the shares were back to the IPO price) • The launch of the new stock market is similar to that Laos • The Laos exchange started in 2011 with two listed firms • Both exchanges are operated as joint ventures with Korea Exchange, Asia's fourth-largest operator • Vietnam launched their first stock exchange in 2000 • Potential investors see huge risks in frontier emerging markets • The Cambodian market, with one listed firm, lacks liquidity • If you want to sell, you may not be able to move large positions," said MortenKvammen, director of underwriter SBI Royal Securities • Some investors remain concerned about corruption, an unclear regulatory framework and the use of the riel currency for trading on the bourse • Ninety percent of deposits and credits in Cambodia's banking system are in dollars, so investors worry about bureaucratic delays and currency fluctuation between transactions and payments • Bangkok-based director of frontier market fund Dragon Capital, likes the transparency and management of PPWSA, the first listed firm • "If Cambodia will continue on its same growth path, will continue to modernize and create wealth then the capital market will expand and the market's liquidity risk will diminish," the director told Reuters • In November 2012 Cambodia had 4,000 investor accounts at licensed brokerages, about a third held by foreigners From Reuters, April 18th, 2012

  16. SET Becomes the Top ASEAN Exchange • The Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) attracted a record number of listings in 2013 • Average daily trading volume overtook SGX, the Singapore exchange • The SET is now the largest exchange in ASEAN by volume, according to the World Federation of Exchanges • The value of total share trading in the first 11 months of 2013 was $320bn on the SET, ahead of the SGX which notched up $265bn. • Bursa Malaysia was third most active with $138bn in average daily volume • The SET plans to change its rules to allow foreign companies to list in Bangkok • The change shows how exchanges in SE Asia are starting to compete as they outgrow their domestic markets and seek to capitalize on business from within the ASEAN • The exchange will focus on expanding to Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam, because they have high growth potential and high need for funds • The EVP in charge of listings at the SET said the exchange would allow any foreign company to list under the new rules, including those from China and Australia • He said “We feel that Thai growth will probably stagnate one of these days. The expansion in our neighboring countries is huge and they are growing at a much faster rate than us” • The move by SET appears aimed at attracting companies that might prefer to list on an exchange with deeper liquidity, modern trading systems and proven corporate governance principles. • Cambodia and Laos each have a stock-exchange. Vietnam has two. According to the FT, Myanmar has accepted assistance from the Japanese to develop a stock exchange. Financial Times 23 December, 2013

  17. A New Cambodian Commodities Exchange • Som Yen, director of Malai Trading Co, a Cambodian agricultural products brokerage for Thai ethanol and flour said that the new commodities exchange would help promote agricultural produce and sustain prices. • “At the moment, our agricultural produce such as corn and cassava is sold [to Thailand] at about 30 percent below the market price,” said Som Yen, who collected about 25,000 tonnes of cassava and corn for export to Thailand last year. • “If this company realizes this initiative, I believe that farmers will benefit from it and will gain broader markets for their agricultural produce.” • Trading in commodities on an official, standardized exchange offers further evidence that the economy is finally maturing as well as integrating to global markets. • Thailand’s TFEX and AFET (Ag Futures Exchange of Thailand) have been in operation since 2004 with focus on SET index futures, gold, and silver; and rice, rubber, tapioca, and canned pineapple • TFEX a subsidiary of SET – offers a broader range of products to local investors • AFET issues with rubber subsidies

  18. Unrest in Thailand and Cambodia • Thailand’s tourism industry accounts for 7% of economic activity • In the past, Thailand earned the nickname Teflon Thailand • Mastercard International predicts Bangkok will become the world’s most visited city, while Instagram reports Siam Paragon is the most photographed location in the world • Planned protests aim to shut down the city January 13th • Singapore Airlines announces it will cancel 19 flights to Bangkok beginning January 14th • First quarter hotel occupancy is predicted to fall 5-10% below the norm (80%) for this time of year • Airport arrivals fell 15% in early December when protests began • The Thai Chamber of Commerce recommended that member businesses stockpile goods outside of the city • Multinationals also fear delays in export-import paperwork • Meanwhile in Cambodia tens of thousands of textile workers have gone on strike across the nation to seek higher minimum wage Wall Street Journal 6-1-2014

  19. How Does Unrest in Cambodia Affect Apparel Business? • Most of the 600 garment factories in Cambodia reopened this week • They had been shut since due to strikes since Dec. 24th • Strikers have been seeking a doubling of the minimum wage to $160 per month • About 60% returned to work this past Monday (January 6th) after the police action against strikers • Garment manufacturing is Cambodia’s biggest export business • Primary customers are US and European apparel firms • About 600K workers are employed in 800 factories (about 17% of the non-agriculture workforce) • Apparel exports grew 22% last year • Strikes are frequent because of low wages, poor enforcement of labor laws, and working conditions • Many factories have temporarily shifted production out of Cambodia while others may be considering a longer-term relocation • According to McKinsey Consultants in 2011 the most likely destination for apparel buyers concerned with increasing costs in China was Bangladesh • They cited prices and capacity as Bangladesh’s key advantages versus gaps in infrastructure and compliance • The 2013 survey lists labor costs as the biggest advantage of sourcing in Bangladesh, with nearly all thinking costs in Bangladesh will increase • A 2013 report listed other countries expected to grow in importance as Vietnam, India, Myanmar, and Cambodia (in that order) • Bangladesh has capacity, productivity, and supplier capabilities, and trade agreements that ensure it will remain the top alternative to China for the next five years 1) Wall Street Journal 7-1-2014; 2) www.mckinsey.de/sites/mck_files/files/2013mckinsey_apparelcposurvey.pdf

  20. Apparel Sourcing in Practice -Li & Fung is the world’s largest logistics and sourcing company. It matches poor countries’ factories and affluent countries’ vendors. It finds the lowest-cost workers, negotiates prices and manages the logistics for roughly a third of the biggest retailers found in a typical shopping mall. -Li and Fung is based in Hong Kong. It owns no clothing factories, no sewing machines and no fabric mills. Its chief asset is the 15,000 suppliers in over 60 countries that make up a network so sprawling that a massive order for skirts that once took six months from drawing board to store shelf now takes six weeks at a much lower price. (NY Times 7 Aug 2013) -Sourcing companies find low-cost factories for clients, and also monitor factory safety standards. The scale of Li & Fung’s operations and the speed at which it shifts production from one site to another give owners little incentive to improve their factories. “We definitely are a part of bringing the prices down, there’s no question about that, because we are arbitraging factories and countries all the time,” Bruce Rockowitz said. “But it has to be a safe factory.” Bruce Rockowitz, chief executive of Li & Fung (NY Times 7 Aug 2013)

  21. The Environment in Which Apparel Sourcing Companies Operate • Li and Fung’s Chairman said Bangladesh still has some of the cheapest labor in the world, he pointed out. For factories to get safer, clothing prices would have to go up, he said. “So far,” he added, “consumers have just not been willing to accept higher costs.” * • Factories, which often consist of just sewing machines on tables, can appear and disappear overnight. • “Li & Fung is your insurance policy for when logistics go wrong,” said Mr. Hertzman, of Sourcing Journal. * • When street protests delay a shipment of khakis bound for Gap and the factory says it cannot afford to move the items by air, it is companies like Li & Fung that will have to cover the cost of the plane, he said. • Li & Fung and other sourcing companies track harvesting schedules because many factories rely on migrant workers. They watch weather reports to advise drivers. • In Dhaka, Bangladesh’s capital, sourcing agents check in daily with political and labor officials who can offer warnings about demonstrations that could shut down production. • They send undercover informants into factories to check for blocked fire exits, for example, or arrive early for scheduled factory inspections to check for child labor violations. • Sourcing companies also insulate retailers from reputation risks when bad things happen • After more than 280 workers vomited and fainted in a three-day period in 2011 at the King Fashion Garment Company factory in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Li & Fung asked the plant to upgrade ventilation and improve wastewater drainage. • Clients with brand equity, such as H&M, were insulated from the bad press * (NY Times 7 Aug 2013)

  22. Measuring Risk Diversification - Strategy designed to reduce risk by spreading the portfolio across many investments. Unique Risk - Risk factors affecting only that firm. Also called “diversifiable risk.” Market Risk - Economy-wide sources of risk that affect the overall stock market. Also called “systematic risk.” Much of the variation of most stocks is from systemic causes.

  23. Performance of Harvard’s Endowment FundOctober, 2009: Endowment Value Declines 29.5% as Investment Return Is - 27.3% (S&P 500 = -24.3% dividends reinvested) Source: Harvard University Financial Report. FY June.

  24. Component Performance Harvard Endowment 2008- 2009 Note: Mohamed A. El-Erian was CEO of Harvard Management Company from 2005-2007

  25. Harvard’s Explanation • The “policy portfolio,” the model that HMC uses to diversify its assets, returned negative 25.2 percent as measured by the investment benchmarks for each asset class—2.1 percent better than HMC’s actual performance. * • During the depths of the financial crisis and then recession last autumn and winter, Harvard’s managers worried that losses in private-equity and real-estate investments might drive even deeper declines in the endowment overall. • Among investment factors, the internally managed domestic fixed-income portfolio, had exposure to some of the less-tradable structured credit securities that were most impacted as the market imploded. * Investments portfolios are often compared to returns on similar classes of assets

  26. Toward Liquidity • At the end of 2008, HMC had $11 billion of commitments to outside managers. • Many outside managers impose holding periods on the investments they make, creating the problem of “strategies with long holding periods” among even liquid asset classes. • Harvard had a lack of ready liquidity in the portfolio to meet obligations as private-equity, hedge-fund, and other asset managers slowed or stopped distributions of funds back to HMC. • The University had its own credit problems in late 2008—necessitating sales of liquid assets at a time when HMC might have preferred not to do so. • Changes to address the problems. • Increase the flexibility and control Harvard has in managing the funds • Greater concentration “in areas where HMC has unique competitive strengths” (note: value of expertise) • Harvard is looking to increase the share of internally managed assets under the right conditions. • Control advantages and feel for the market realized through internal money-management expertise • HMC personnel managed about 30 percent of the portfolio in 2009, down from 70 percent early in the decade • Reduce leverage (keep cash on hand appropriate to circumstances) • The policy portfolio for years called for a negative 5 percent cash position (borrowing to boost investment returns). • That allocation is now modeled as positive 2 percent Harvard Magazine October 2009

  27. The Lessons for Us • Harvard’s portfolio was fully diversified and in many instances hedged • You can not diversify away systemic risk • Hedges are imperfect and normally have high cost • Harvard faced liquidity problems when they needed liquidity • Be wary of leverage, especially when macro conditions change • Understand your ability to raise cash or exit markets when conditions change • Expertise in investment categories has value independent of diversification • Remember Warren Buffett’s words about the value of expertise

  28. Hedge Fund Performance • A recent analysis conducted by Goldman Sachs shows that the typical hedge fund has returned just 4 percent this year through August 9 — poor compared to the 20 percent return on the S&P 500 (including dividends). • Last year hedge funds returned 8 percent return compared to a 16 percent total return for the S&P 500 • The time-tested message is clear: hedging produces underwhelming results during long market rallies. • Hedge funds typically try to compensate for possible losses on long positions by taking counter-balancing short positions. This strategy can produce superior results during periods of market uncertainty when equity valuations are volatile. • However stock valuations have pretty much done nothing but go up since the financial crisis. • This has heaped rewards on those with long positions, and punished those with aggressive short positions, including many hedge funds. • The Goldman Sachs report shows that fewer than 5 percent of hedge funds have managed to outperform the S&P 500 this year to date, and 25 of them have actually posted losses. • Talent moves from fund to fund, and over time strategies are copied.

  29. Global Diversification • In the early 1990s Japanese stocks had negative beta • Beta changes over time (beta is a measure of market risk) • Worldwide, stock markets now share similar patterns • The MSCI is an index of 23 developed country stock markets • From 1997-2006 the USA had beta of .98 relative to the MSCI • Japan had beta of .86 relative to the MSCI • The beta of German stocks relative to MSCI was .65 • In 2008 the MSCI was down 40% including dividend reinvestment • The US NASDAQ was down 40% • The S&P 500 was down 37% including dividend reinvestment • Emerging markets did not ‘decouple’ in 2008

  30. International Diversification EME is emerging markets, EAFE is developed markets excl North America

  31. Some Basic Concepts • Options – the right but not the obligation to buy or to sell at a specified price on or before a specified date • Call option – right to buy an asset at a specified exercise price on or before a specified exercise date • Put option – right to sell an asset at a specified exercise price on or before a specified exercise date • Price of an option is determined by volatility and time to maturity; stock price and exercise price • Options written on volatile assets are worth more than those written on safe assets (the opposite of capital investments) • Forward contract – a commitment between two parties (to buy and to sell). These involve counterparty risk. • Futures contract – a standardized commitment to buy a security or a commodity at a price that is fixed today. Traded on an exchange. • Employee Stock Options – compensation in the form of stock options on volatile shares is worth more than on stable shares

  32. Risk Reduction • Risks to a business • Cash shortfalls • Financial distress • Agency costs • Variable costs • Currency fluctuations • Political instability • Weather changes

  33. Insurance • Most businesses face the possibility of a hazard that can bankrupt the company in an instant. • These risks are neither financial or business and can not be diversified. • The cost and risk of a loss due to a hazard, however, can be shared by others who share the same risk.

  34. Insurance Example An offshore oil platform is valued at $1 billion. Expert meteorologist reports indicate that a 1 in 10,000 chance exists that the platform may be destroyed by a storm over the course of the next year. ? How can the cost of this hazard be shared

  35. Insurance Example - cont An offshore oil platform is valued at $1 billion. Expert meteorologist reports indicate that a 1 in 10,000 chance exists that the platform may be destroyed by a storm over the course of the next year. ? How can the cost of this hazard be shared Answer A large number ofcompanies with similar risks can each contribute pay into a fund that is set aside to pay the cost should a member of this risk sharing group experience the 1 in 10,000 loss. The other 9,999 firms may not experience a loss, but also avoided the risk of not being compensated should a loss have occurred.

  36. Insurance Example - cont An offshore oil platform is valued at $1 billion. Expert meteorologist reports indicate that a 1 in 10,000 chance exists that the platform may be destroyed by a storm over the course of the next year. ? What would the cost to each group member be for this protection. Answer

  37. Insurance • Why would an insurance company not offer a policy on this oil platform for $100,000? • Administrative costs – such as legal fees • Adverse selection – bad risks are most eager to take insurance • Moral hazard(owner may be less careful to take precautions when insured)

  38. Insurance • The loss of an oil platform by a storm may be 1 in 10,000. The risk, however, is larger for an insurance company since all the platforms in the same area may be insured, thus if a storm damages one in may damage all in the same area. The result is a much larger risk to the insurer • Reinsurance is transferring portions of risk portfolios to other parties in order to reduce the likelihood of having to pay a large insurance claim. The reinsurer gets some portion of the premiums in return for accepting part of the risk.

  39. Reducing Risk with Options How options protected Mexico against a fall in oil prices. a. Sell 330 million barrels of oil at market price = $23.1BB revenue 23.1 Revenue, $billions $70 Price per barrel

  40. Reducing Risk with Options How options protected Mexico against a fall in oil prices. b. Buy put options with $70 exercise price. Payoff rises as oil prices falls below $70 (right to sell at $70). 23.1 Revenue, $billions $70 Price per barrel

  41. Reducing Risk with Options How options protected Mexico against a fall in oil prices. c. Lock in minimum price of $70 a barrel. For each $1 oil price rise above $70/barrel, revenue rises $330MM. This “put” cost about $1.5BB (6.4%) 23.1 Revenue, $billions $70 Price per barrel

  42. Hedging with Forwards and Futures Ex - Kellogg produces cereal. A major component and cost factor is sugar. • Forecasted income & sales volume is set by using a fixed selling price. • Changes in cost can impact these forecasts. • To fix your sugar costs, you would ideally like to purchase all your sugar today, since you like today’s price, and made your forecasts based on it. But, you can not. • You can, however, sign a contract to purchase sugar at various points in the future for a price negotiated today. • This contract is called a “Futures Contract.” • This technique of managing your sugar costs is called “Hedging.”

  43. Hedging with Forwards and Futures 1- Spot Contract - A contract for immediate sale & delivery of an asset. 2- Forward Contract - A contract between two people for the delivery of an asset at a negotiated price on a set date in the future. 3- Futures Contract - A contract similar to a forward contract, except there is an intermediary that creates a standardized contract. Thus, the two parties do not have to negotiate the terms of the contract. The intermediary is the Commodity Clearing Corp (CCC). The CCC guarantees all trades & “provides” a secondary market for the speculation of Futures.

  44. Types of Futures Commodity Futures -Sugar -Corn -Orange Juice -Wheat -Soy beans -Pork bellies Financial Futures -T-bills -Yen -Stocks -Eurodollars Index Futures -S&P 500 -Value Line Index -Vanguard Index SUGAR

  45. Commodity Futures

  46. Financial Futures

  47. Futures Contract Concepts Not an actual sale – price is fixed but payment made later Margin - post partial amount as assurance of ability to pay No counterparty risk –exchange guarantees payment Always a winner & a loser (unlike stocks) Contracts are “settled” every day. (Marked to Market) Hedge - Contracts used to eliminate risk by locking in prices Speculation - Contracts used to gamble Hog K = 30,000 lbs T-bill K = $1.0 mil Value line Index contract = $index x 500

  48. Ex - Settlement & Speculate Example - You are speculating in Hog Futures. You think that the Spot Price of hogs will rise in the future. Thus, you go Long on 10 Hog Futures. If the price drops .17 cents per pound ($.0017) what is total change in your position?

  49. Ex - Settlement & Speculate Example - You are speculating in Hog Futures. You think that the Spot Price of hogs will rise in the future. Thus, you go Long on 10 Hog Futures. If the price drops .17 cents per pound ($.0017) what is total change in your position? 30,000 lbs x $.0017 loss x 10 Ks = $510.00 loss 50.63 cents per lbs 50.80 -$510 Since you must settle your account every day, you must give your broker $510.00

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