Because market prices should not allow for arbitrage opportunities, the terminal cash flow
If the cash flow were positive, this strategy would yield guaranteed profits for no invest-
ment. If the cash flow were negative, the reverse of this strategy also would yield profits. In
practice, the reverse strategy would involve a short sale of the commodity. This is unusual
but may be done as long as the short sale contract appropriately accounts for storage costs.
Equation 23.3 to the parity relation for stocks, Equation 22.1 from the previous chapter, and
you will see that they are extremely similar. In fact, if we think of carrying costs as a “nega-
tive dividend,” the equations are identical. This result makes intuitive sense because, instead
Obviously, this parity relationship is simply an extension of those we have seen already.
C H A P T E R
2 3
Futures, Swaps, and Risk Management
823
Although we have called
c the carrying cost of
the commodity, we may interpret it more gener-
ally as the net carrying cost, that is, the carrying
cost net of the benefits derived from holding the
commodity in inventory. For example, part of the
“convenience yield” of goods held in inventory
is the protection against stocking out, which may
result in lost production or sales.
It is vital to note that we derive Equation 23.3
assuming that the asset will be bought and stored;
it therefore applies only to goods that currently
are
being stored. Two kinds of commodities
cannot be expected to be stored. The first kind
is commodities for which storage is technologi-
cally not feasible, such as electricity. The second
includes goods that are not stored for economic
reasons. For example, it would be foolish to buy
an agricultural commodity now, planning to store
it for ultimate use in 3 years. Instead, it is clearly
preferable to delay the purchase until after the
harvest of the third year, and avoid paying stor-
age costs. Moreover, if the crop in the third year
is comparable to this year’s, you could obtain it
at roughly the same price as you would pay this
year. By waiting to purchase, you avoid both interest and storage costs.
Because storage across harvests is costly, Equation 23.3 should not be expected to apply
for holding periods that span harvest times, nor should it apply to perishable goods that are
available only “in season.” Whereas the futures price for gold, which is a stored commodity,
increases steadily with the maturity of the contract, the futures price for wheat is seasonal;
its futures price typically falls across harvests between March and July as new supplies
become available.
Figure 23.9 is a stylized version of the seasonal price pattern for an agricultural product.
Clearly this pattern differs from financial assets such as stocks or gold for which there is
no seasonal price movement. Financial assets are priced so that holding them in portfo-
lio produces a fair expected return. Agricultural prices, in contrast, are subject to steep
periodic drops as each crop is harvested, which makes storage across harvests generally
unprofitable.
Futures pricing across seasons therefore requires a different approach that is not based
on storage across harvest periods. In place of general no-arbitrage restrictions we rely
instead on risk premium theory and discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis.
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