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Resumen de Fine-tuning a corporate hedging portfolio: The case of an airline.

Matthias Gerner, E.I. Ronn

  • Industrial companies typically face a multitude of risks that could cause significant fluctuations in their cash flow. This is a case study of the hedging strategy adopted by an international air carrier to manage its jet-fuel price exposure. The airline's hedging approach uses 'strips' of monthly collars constructed with Asian options whose payoffs are based on average of 'within-prompt-month' oil prices. Using the carrier's own implicit objective function based on an annual granularity, the authors show how the air carrier could fine-tune its current hedge portfolio by adding tailored exotic options. The article describes annual average-price options, provides an explicit valuation of them, and considers how such instruments may affect corporate liquidity. Consistent with its annual objective function, the airline made this exotic derivative the central tool to hedge across all potential realized values of annual jet-fuel spot prices. The authors believe this modified portfolio is better suited to address the firm's hedging cost and its overall exposure to jet-fuel price fluctuations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]


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