I am a part of the team which is responsible for management and hedging of commodities exposures. Some say corporates are good only in following advice from banks or brokerages. I do agree corporates do not have market insight of a bank. But here is a problem. It is not bank or broker or a hedge fund that has biggest risk that markets will go against them. These guys always have an option to do nothing and wait for a better trading opportunity where as we don't. We have to continue to purchase commodities, spend currencies for daily business. Such company is always exposed to changes to market price even if it decides not to hedge. In fact my company has probably one of the biggest short commodities portfolio in the world. Managing such risk effectively is a challenge. It is like being between a rock and a hard place. You get your behind kicked all the time be senior management, whether it was a missed opportunity to hedge or hedge that turned to be out of the money. Critics will say if you lost money on your hedge then you probably bought it cheaper on physical market. let's face it, nobody wants to loose money, full-stop.

So I do not have an option to do nothing as I am always in the position (short in this case). I think people like me have higher motivation to earn positive return on their portfolio then other players. In fact my intention is to bring hedging to a performance benchmark of proprietary trading.

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Thursday, September 30, 2010

Loooking at big picture

We indeed had a great September. Bucking the trend equities had a best year in 70 years and commodities followed. Most of the currencies strengthened vs dollar.

Can great September turn out to be a miserable October?

Last days of September were mainly characterised by expectations of FED easing, but recent data suggests that the economy is not yet there to employ heavy artillery. I, personally, it will take an effort to pass any additional easing as politics get involved.

Well, longer term charts suggest we're still not there to call it a winning situation and a full blown market rally. First of all, S&P monthly chart:


Long term momentum still remains down and 1155 is area where many moving averages cross. Moreover last 4 months of trading look more like a correction rather then a firm trend upwards.

This coincides with 15 month moving average in EURUSD, which worked well previously:



which currently acts like resistance. These are long term charts, so trading off them is difficult, but at least this will help to identify long term trends...

Commodities put a very good month thanks to weaker dollar and improving sentiment, however having copper at $8000 and oil at $82 still suggests long term bear trend. Faltering equities might as well put a cap on recent rally.

End of the month trading might result in bearish reversal days for equities (if we close under 1140) and EURUSD. (under 1.3560). While beginning of the month usually involves big money going onto either side of the market, I would wait until next week to have a clearer short term view on the markets...

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