Dear David,
In the FRM handbook of Jorion, I think I have found a mistakes in the answers, but I am not quite sure. Hope you can verify.
A bronze producer will sell 1,000mt of bronze in three months at the prevailing market price at that time. The SD of the price of bronze over a three-month period is 2.6%. The company decides to use three-month futures on copper to hedge. The copper futures contract is for 25 mt of copper. The SD of the futures price is 3.2%. The correlation is 0.77%. To hedge its price exposure how many futures contract should the company buy/sell?
A) Sell 38 futures
B) Buy 25 futures
C) Buy 63 futures
D) Sell 25 futures.
The anwer, according to Jorion, is answer B.
However, I think it should be D. Hull states in chapter 3 of his book that a short hedge is appropriate when the hedger already owns an asset and expects to sell it at some time in the future. Which is the case here.
Am I interpreting this wronly?
So, who is right?
Thanks in advance,
Johannes
In the FRM handbook of Jorion, I think I have found a mistakes in the answers, but I am not quite sure. Hope you can verify.
A bronze producer will sell 1,000mt of bronze in three months at the prevailing market price at that time. The SD of the price of bronze over a three-month period is 2.6%. The company decides to use three-month futures on copper to hedge. The copper futures contract is for 25 mt of copper. The SD of the futures price is 3.2%. The correlation is 0.77%. To hedge its price exposure how many futures contract should the company buy/sell?
A) Sell 38 futures
B) Buy 25 futures
C) Buy 63 futures
D) Sell 25 futures.
The anwer, according to Jorion, is answer B.
However, I think it should be D. Hull states in chapter 3 of his book that a short hedge is appropriate when the hedger already owns an asset and expects to sell it at some time in the future. Which is the case here.
Am I interpreting this wronly?
So, who is right?
Thanks in advance,
Johannes