Energy derivatives
An electricity consumer wants to buy 1,000 MWh for 3 months.
In order to have a predictable disbursement for this purchase, the company decides to contract, through the derivative instrument, the purchase of 1,000 MWh at a price of R$100/MWh the average PLD (Brazilian “spot”) for 3 months.
At the expiration of the contract (3 months later), the adjustment value for the buyer of the Electricity Term will be calculated according to the expression below
Adjustment (R$) = (PLD at Maturity – PLD contracted) x Quantity of MWh
There are 3 possibilities for the PLD: above, below or exactly at the value. The table shows an example simulating each of them.
1st) PLD at maturity of R$ 120/MWh
Adjustment (R$) = (120 – 100) x 1,000 = R$ 20 thousand that the buyer will receive
2nd) PLD at maturity of R$ 100/MWh
Adjustment (R$) = (100 – 100) x 1,000 = 0 that the buyer will receive
3rd) PLD at maturity of R$80/MWh
Adjustment (R$) = (80 – 100) x 1,000 = R$20 thousand that the buyer will pay
In all three cases, the buyer will end up having the same final cost of R$100,000.
This is a very interesting way of risk management. This “tool” will certainly be worth considering.
In Brazil we already have platforms that enable these transactions.