Commodity-Based “Swing” Options
Commodity-Based “Swing” Options
Introduction
May You Live in Interesting Times
The Dodd–Frank Act and its Impact on the Energy Industry
Assessing Regulatory Risk
Introduction to Price-Reporting Agencies
Fundamental Data in Energy Markets
European and Asian Natural Gas Market Developments – Swamped by the Present?
US Natural-Gas Markets
Managing Oil Price Risk: Dealing with the Time-Varying Relationship between the Price of Oil and Fundamentals
Electricity Markets: US
European Electricity Markets: Part I
European Electricity Markets: Part II
Coal
Energy Real Options: Valuation and Operations
Commodity-Based “Swing” Options
Gas Storage Pricing and Hedging
Valuation and Risk Management of Physical Assets
Arbitrage-Free Valuation of Energy Derivatives
Introduction to Value-at-Risk
Introduction to Portfolio Value-at-Risk
Introduction to Default Risk and Counterparty Credit Modelling
Credit Risk in Power and Gas Markets
Credit in the Energy Markets
One of the most complex derivative structures is a contract that exists in the commodity arena – in particular, natural-gas and electricity – which incorporates flexibility-of-delivery options. As is the case for all options with a constant strike price, they provide protection against price changes. Subject to periodic (daily or monthly) as well as aggregate constraints, they permit the option holder to repeatedly exercise the right to receive quantities of energy. Consequently, these options have an implicit dependence through time: the exercise of an option today limits, and may eliminate, the ability to draw such energy tomorrow. While these options are indeed “exotic", what renders them of specific interest is that there exists a natural raison d’être for their existence: they address the need to hedge in a market subject to frequent, but not pervasive, price-spiking behaviour typically followed by mean-reversion to normal levels. This chapter specifies the option, known as “swing” or “take-or-pay”, addresses the motivation for their existence and provides their valuation implication.
INTRODUCTION
This chapter addresses the motivation for and valuation of a complex
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