Course description
Gas and Power Hedging is a two-day instructor-led course presented by the energy training experts at Mennta Energy Solutions. The principal aim of this course is to expose delegates, to comprehensive training on gas and power hedging and risk management for utilities in an applied context.
The course will enable participants to gain a practical working knowledge of gas and power markets, their main players and common traded instruments. Delegates will gain a practical understanding of the various dimensions of risk for utilities active in gas and power markets and the various tools to manage and transfer those risks.
We will present new approaches to hedge energy exposures with derivatives as well as useful techniques to unbundle gas and power structures in long term contracts and physical assets. Particular emphasis is placed on the use of derivatives as well as physical assets and contracts to manage price, credit, volumetric, and operations risk.
Course Methodology And Materials
This course is highly interactive, and we encourage delegate participation and group discussions.
Numerous case studies are presented throughout the courses, with particular emphasis on the interpretation and use of trading and risk management concepts introduced in real-life examples.
Delegates will make presentations to the group and conduct numerous individual and group exercises.
Trading Simulation
The trading simulation will provide an opportunity for delegates to use the main hedging instruments as well as take advantage of market views as a response to changes in power market conditions. Delegates will execute their own trading strategy and will calculate and monitor their own P/L, adjust their hedge book, as well as keep positions within limits such as volumetric, stop losses, VaR and Stress tests.
Do you work at this organisation and want to update this page?
Is there out-of-date information about your organisation or courses published here? Fill out this form to get in touch with us.
Content
Day I
Power Prices, Drivers, Behavior, and Volatility
- Physical and Financial Gas and Power Markets: From Producers to End-users
- Risk dimensions: Market, credit, liquidity, volume, operations, operational
- Long or short? Volumetric and Financial Considerations
- Forward curve analysis for power markets: Shaping and Extrapolation
- Case study: Forward curves vs. Price Forecasts
- Gas and Power Drivers in North America
- Spot and Forward energy price behavior and its volatility structure
Physical Contracts, Futures, Swaps and Basis Swaps
- Physical purchase and sale contracts
- Fixed Price, Index, Heat Rate
- Price Fixing, delivery window and settlement timeline in physical vs. financial contracts
- Futures contracts
- Open Interest, Bid-ask Spreads and Volume
- Swaps (Fixed-for-Floating, Index)
- Basis Swaps
Physical and Financial Options
- Review of key option concepts
- Options types and payoffs
- Average Price (Asian) Options and Options on Swaps (Swaptions)
- Understanding optionality and contract components
- Use of options in utility hedging programs
Mark to Market, P/L and Position Management
- Book Structure and Position Management
- Front, Middle and Back Office Flows
- Mark to market vs. Mark to Model
- Position Management for portfolios with assets, physical contracts and financial instruments
- Mark-to-model: Illiquid instruments and derivatives valuation
- Implied volatility vs. Historical Volatility
- Volatility skews and volatility surfaces
Utility Hedging Strategy Discussion (I)
- Review of pre-reading papers
- Questions for discussion on Day II
Day 2.
Utility Hedging Strategy Discussion (II)
- Group discussion
Market, Liquidity and Credit Risk Management
- Market Risk Management for Physical transactions
- Understanding and interpreting “at-Risk” measures, Value at Risk, Earnings at Risk (EaR), Cash Flow at Risk (CFaR)
- Anticipating potential collateral and margin needs. Introduction to Collateral at Risk. (superficially)
- Sensitivity analysis and Stress Tests
- Credit Risk Measurement and Management: Netting, Collateral and Credit Triggers
- Current Exposure and Walk Forward Analysis
- Credit Exposures and Potential Future Exposure Modeling
Real options and Physical Assets
- Typology of Real Options
- Optimization and Monetization Strategies
- Standard vs. Real Options
- Locational basis relationships in gas and power markets
- Pipeline capacity
- Congestion Revenue Rights (CRR) and Financial Transmission Rights (FTR)
- Power generation and dispatch optionality
Volumetric and Weather Risk
- Key sources of volume risk in power markets: Supply and Demand
- Renewable generation and impact on power markets
- Hedging Volumetric Risk: Weather Derivatives and Multiple-trigger contracts
- Volumetric risk and Operational Risk
- Possible problems when hedging physical exposures with financial forwards
- Unplanned Outage Insurance
- Battery storage as a hedge instrument for utilities portfolios
Hedging Strategies with Options
- Zero Cost Collars: Benefits and risks
- Straddles and delta-neutral strategies
- Case study: Hedging volume risk with straddles
- Energy option ‘Greeks’: uses and limitations
- Tips for negotiating with hedge counterparties