Most ag grain producers are able to lock in prices by using either a hedge or a forward contract. Forward cash contracting involves a commitment to deliver grain to a grain buyer at a future time. Both alternatives can be used to: price before and after harvest; establish a return for storage of grain; and reduce price risk. Thus, deciding which alternative to use depends upon weighing hedging advantages and disadvantages in comparison to forward cash contracting.
Hedging Advantages vs. Forward Cash Contracting
- Hedging allows flexibility to later select the appropriate delivery point to take advantage of competing buyers for your grain.
- Hedging allows you to reverse a decision based upon changes in growing conditions, changes in price outlook and changes in the condition of stored grain. Once a forward cash contract commitment is made, it is very difficult to change or cancel. A position in a futures contract can be terminated almost immediately.
- Hedging allows the farmer to speculate on basis improving.
- Hedging generally lengthens the potential pricing period to 20 to 24 months, including about one year before and after harvest. This can be longer than a forward cash contract.
Hedging Disadvantages vs. Forward Cash Contracting
- In hedging, you may not know the final price due to changes in the final basis as compared to the initial basis.
- Hedging is more complex than forward cash contracting. To hedge successfully, a farmer must understand futures markets, cash markets and the basis relationships between the two markets. They must trade in a futures market and involve a commodity broker and have a banker who understands and is committed to hedging.
- Margin money is required to maintain a futures position. A forward cash contract typically does not involve margin deposits.
- Hedging involves commissions and interest on margin money. These extra costs may average 1 to 2 cents per bushel.
- Since hedging generally involves using future contracts in either 1,000 or 5,000 bushel lots, the farmer is locked into these quantities to hedge.
- Basis levels may not gain as expected and can even widen more than expected.
Remember that hedging never guarantees a profit. The hedging decision needs to take into account production costs and market outlook. However, the good use of a hedging program can help the farmer prevent pricing indecision where the farmer “does-nothing-until-forced-to-sell-strategy” which normally leads to much lower prices.
Categories: Commodity Marketing, Profit Center
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