FNCE30007 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: Canadian Dollar, Spot Contract, Swedish Krona

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Short hedge = hedge that involves a short position in a futures contract. Appropriate when the hedger owns an asset and expects to sell it at some time in the future. Long hedge = hedge that involves a long position in a futures contract. Appropriate when the hedge knows it will have to purchase a certain asset in the future and wants to lock in a price now. Most companies focus on their main activities instead of predicting variable, so they hedge the risks associate with these variables. Shareholders can do the hedging themselves - assumes that shareholders have as much information as the company"s management, ignores commissions and other transaction costs, shareholders can diversify risk better. Hedging can lead to a worse outcome - futures positions leads to an offsetting loss if price increases. The asset whose price is to be hedged may not be exactly the same as the asset underlying the futures contract.

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