Implications of hedging by selling contracts


Question 1. A farmer anticipates having 50,000 bushels of wheat ready for harvest in September. What would be the implications of hedging by (a) selling 8 contracts (b) selling 10 contracts, and (c) selling 12 contracts of September wheat?

Question 2. The crude oil futures contract on the NYMEX covers 1,000 barrels of crude oil and is quoted in dollars and cents per barrel. The minimum price change is $0.01. The initial margin requirement is $3,375 and the maintenance requirement is $2,500. Suppose you purchased the contract at $27.42 putting up the initial margin. At what price would you receive a margin call?

Question 3. The over-the-counter forward price of commodity is currently $45 and expires in one year. The risk-free interest rate is 10 percent. Suppose that six months later the spot price of the commodity is $52. What is the forward contract worth at that time?

Question 4. You observe a futures contract with a value of $102. Call options with a strike price of $100 and 3 months to expiration on the same contract are selling for $4. Put options with the same strike and time to expiration are selling for $1.75. If the risk-free interest rate is 10 percent verify that put-call parity holds.

Question 5. Suppose the September S&P 500 stock index futures was priced at 960.50. At the same time The S&P 500 index was 956.49. The contract expires 73 days later. Assuming continuous compounding, is the contract correctly priced if the risk-free rate is 5.96 percent and the dividend yield on the index is 2.75 percent?

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Finance Basics: Implications of hedging by selling contracts
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