Past event: Energy/Electricity Hedging, Trading, Futures, Options & Derivatives Seminar

This seminar is the energy & electric power industry's most comprehensive two-day training program on this topic - A Two-Day Classroom Seminar (CPE Approved)

This proven program is for energy and electric power professionals who are looking for a comprehensive and clearly explained understanding of natural gas, oil and electricity financial instruments, the markets they trade in, and how these powerful tools can be used to manage risk and structure profitable transactions. A discussion of how the Blockchain, smart contracts and atomic swaps might effect the energy markets has been added to the program.


What You Will Learn

  1. How to use futures contracts, options, swaps, trigger deals, ''The Master Energy Hedging Equation'' and other techniques to create customized risk management solutions to protect your company from natural gas, oil and electricity price risk, basis & LMP risk, delivery risk and volumetric (intermittency) risk.
  2. How physical and cash settled futures contracts, over-the-counter energy swaps and physical forward contracts are traded and the purposes served by these markets.
  3. How the ICE and CME-NYMEX futures exchanges and electronic marketplaces function, and what the differences are between ICE OTC, ICE Futures, CME Globex, CME Clearport Services and The Nodal Exchange.
  4. How block-chain technology, ''smart contracts'' and ''atomic swaps'' may impact energy transactions and markets.
  5. How ''cash margining'' is done with a futures exchange, its cash management impact and the role of the Clearinghouse.
  6. What the differences are between a futures commission merchant (''FCM''), over-the-counter broker, trader, market-maker, power marketer and wholesale energy merchant.
  7. What basis risk is, and how basis, spread, LMP and delivery risks can blow up your energy and electricity hedges.
  8. Why Trigger Deals are so popular, and what the difference is between the financial and physical basis (''fin'' and ''phys'').
  9. How to structure profitable energy, electric power, and petroleum transactions without exposure to price risk; how to financially create synthetic energy assets; and how to financially turn one commodity into another.
  10. How to make money by buying valuable energy options from your customers and suppliers, and how your company may be missing a significant financial opportunity.
  11. Why ''extendible'' deals are so profitable, and how energy trading floors ''trade around assets.''
  12. What the terms ''Contango'' and ''Backwardation'' mean.
  13. Where to find the four different Master Sales & Purchase Agreement templates which contain the standard industry bilateral contract language for physical & financial natural gas and electric power transactions.

You Will Also Learn

  1. What The ''Master Energy Trading Equation'' is, and why trading energy and electricity is different from the trading financial products and other commodities.
  2. The many different types of energy and electricity trading, why traders specialize and the different ways energy traders can get an ''edge'' on the competition.
  3. What the rationale, concepts and mechanics are for basis trading, spread trading and structured transactions.
  4. The fundamentals of energy and electricity options, the implications of high energy price volatility, and why merchant energy and electric power assets are valuable Call options.
  5. How to hedge energy and electricity price risk with CME-NYMEX options contracts, cash settled OTC options and physical peaking options; and how to create price caps, price floors and ''no cost'' collars.
  6. How to calculate annualized volatility, the fundamentals of pricing options and why the Black Scholes model may not work for pricing energy and electricity options.
  7. The basics of the valuable put-call option parity equation, synthetic option positions and how to delta hedge.
  8. The basics of the ''value-at-risk'' (''VaR'') calculation and why to be careful.
  9. What Tolling Deals, asset optionality, and the petroleum industry's ''Carry Trade'' are, and how they work.
  10. Why a merchant fossil fuel generating plant is a call option on the spot spark spread.
  11. A simple rule that will optimize your daily decisions on whether to use or idle a merchant electric generator, storage facility or transportation asset.
  12. How heat-rate-linked power transactions can effectively convert natural gas futures, options, and swaps into electric power financial instruments which can then be used to manage electricity risks or to structure profitable power deals. (Optional additional class material offered at 4:15 PM on Day 1.)
  13. How electricity financial markets interact with the ISO Day-Ahead Energy Auction markets, and how these two separate worlds support each other. (Optional additional class material. offered at 4:15 PM on Day 1.)


Who Should Attend this Seminar

Among those who will benefit from this seminar include energy and electric power executives; attorneys; government regulators; traders & trading support staff; marketing, sales, purchasing & risk management personnel; accountants & auditors; plant operators; engineers; and corporate planners. Types of companies that typically attend this program include energy producers and marketers; utilities; banks & financial houses; industrial companies; accounting, consulting & law firms; municipal utilities; government regulators and electric generators.

Prerequisites and Advance Preparation
This fundamental level group live seminar has no prerequisites. No advance preparation is required before the seminar.

Program Level
Basic level. This fundamental course begins with basic material and then proceeds to the intermediate level.

Delivery Method
Group-live.

Each Class is Limited to First 20 Registrants

Your Instructor

John Adamiak
John Adamiak is President and Founder of PGS Energy Training and an expert in energy derivatives and electric power markets. Mr. Adamiak is a well-known and highly effective seminar presenter who has over 20 years experience in the natural gas and electric power industries. His background includes 15 years as a seminar instructor, 9 years of energy transaction experience, and 6 years of strategic planning and venture capital activities. John's academic background includes an M.B.A. degree from Carnegie Mellon University.

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Seminar Agenda

DAY ONE
  • Overview of the three different energy & electric power forward markets, terminology, the purposes served by these markets, price & spread hedgers and the basics of energy and electricity physical transactions.
  • The differences between futures commission merchants (''FCM''), over-the-counter brokers, traders, market-makers, and energy/power marketers.
  • The four different methods used to manage energy and electricity price, basis, spread, delivery, operational, and volumetric (intermittency) risks.
  • The dangers of liquidity risk, and when it can blow up a company.
  • What physically-settled energy futures contracts are; why only 1% of physical energy futures go to physical delivery and what the difference is between a physically-settled energy future contract and a physical forward contract.
  • How the CME and ICE futures exchanges are structured and the role of the CME and Ice Clear Clearinghouses.
  • How physically-settled and cash-settled energy futures contracts trade electronically on CME Globex and ICE Futures.
  • The broker account maintenance, margin deposit, cash management and ''funding risk'' issues associated with clearing a financial or physical energy transaction through the CME, Ice Clear or Nodal Exchange Clearinghouses.
  • LUNCH
  • How buyers and sellers hedge natural gas, crude oil, heating oil and gasoline price risk with CME physically-settled futures contracts.
  • The ''political'' risks of hedging and the factors that can weaken the effectiveness of a futures hedge.
  • How ''Active Hedging'', ''Dynamic Hedging'' and ''Hedgulation'' can hurt your company’s hedging program.
  • What the difference is between the locational ''basis'' and a locational price spread.
  • The five different ways the term ''basis'' is used in the energy markets.
  • How the ''Master Energy Hedging Equation'' is defined, and what its implications are.
  • What basis risk is, and how it can destroy your futures hedges.
  • Two examples of natural gas ''basis blowout'' and how it relates to LMP spread risk in ISO electricity markets.
  • The difference between a commodity swap, contract-for-differences (''CFD''), cash-settled futures contract and cash-settled swap futures contract.
  • The definition and use of common energy/electricity cash-settled financial instruments including fixed-for-floating, penultimate, exchange-indexed, basis, index, swing, dart, outright swap and cash-settled futures products.
  • How buyers and sellers use cash-settled futures contracts and swaps to hedge natural gas, oil and electricity price, basis, spread, and LMP risk.
  • How buyers and sellers can use cash-settled financial instruments to turn natural gas into virtual oil or virtual electricity (And vice-versa); Day Ahead LMP into Real Time LMP (And vice-versa); An average of daily prices into a fixed or monthly index price; and many other forms of ''slicing & dicing.''
  • An overview of how the ''ICE OTC'' energy & electricity trading platform works.
  • What the differences are between ICE OTC, ICE Futures, CME Globex, CME Clearport Services CME Direct and The Nodal Exchange.
  • Where to find the four different Master Sales & Purchase Agreement templates which contain the standard industry bilateral contract language for physical & financial natural gas and electric power transactions.
  • How basis & spread swaps work; and how these swaps relate to cash-settled futures contracts and ISO administered electricity FTRs, CRRs, and TCCs.
  • The dangers of energy & electricity delivery risk during high demand periods, and what to do about it (Plan ''B'').
  • The difference between the financial and physical locational basis (''fin'' and phys'').
  • What a ''trigger deal'' is, and why it is economically and politically efficient.
  • Why so many energy industry buyers and sellers outsource the execution of their hedges and risk management solutions.
  • How the ''Master Energy Hedging Equation'' is a simple and powerful way to quickly understand many different types of energy transactions and to quickly convert one form of transaction into another.
  • How the ''Master Energy Hedging Equation'' underlies the structure of a firm’s energy trading books.
  • The basics of the ''Value-at-Risk'' (''VaR'') calculation, and why to be careful.
  • Additional Electricity Material ( Optional Session from 4:15 pm to 5 pm):
  • How heat-rate-linked power transactions can convert natural gas futures, options, and swaps into electric power financial instruments which can then be used to hedge electricity risks or to structure profitable power deals.
  • How electricity financial markets interact with the ISO Day-Ahead Energy Auction markets, and how these two separate worlds support each other.

DAY TWO
  • ''Puts'', ''Calls'', extrinsic value and other energy option terminology and concepts.
  • The difference between exchange-traded, over-the-counter and physical energy/electricity options.
  • What American, European and Asian style options are.
  • Why one should never exercise an option before its expiration date.
  • Mean reversion & price jumps--Why the Black Scholes option pricing model may not accurately price energy and electricity options.
  • The services often used to price energy options.
  • The methodology used to calculate ''annualized volatility'' for the energy markets.
  • The important implications of high energy price volatility
  • Why trading energy and electricity is different from the trading equities, bonds and other commodities.
  • The many different types of energy and electricity trading.
  • Why traders specialize, and the different ways energy traders can get an ''edge'' on the competition.
  • Many types of energy & electricity trading can be summarized by one simple three dimensional graph and ''The Master Energy Trading Equation.''
  • Why many traders trade the ‘basis'' or price spreads, and how it works.
  • Why merchant energy and electric power assets are valuable Call options on spreads.
  • What asset ''optionality'' means.
  • What the terms ''Contango'' and ''Backwardation'' mean, and how the energy ''carry trade'' works.
  • Why having ownership or contractual control of physical energy assets gives a significant advantage to a trading company.
  • What ''trading around assets'' means
  • Why a merchant fossil fuel generating plant is a call option on the spot spark spread.
  • A simple rule that will optimize your daily decisions on whether to use or idle a merchant electric generator, storage facility or transportation asset.
  • What a ''tolling deal'' is.
  • What ''structured transactions'' are, and why they can be a ''win/win'' for all parties involved.
  • How an energy marketing company can structure a risk free physical price cap for a customer or a price floor for a supplier.
  • How energy and power marketers make money by buying valuable energy options from their customers and suppliers, and how your company may be missing a significant financial opportunity.
  • What ''extendible'' deals are, and why they are so profitable for energy marketing companies.
  • SNACK AT 11:30 will be provided (no lunch).
  • How to create price caps, price floors and ''no cost'' collars with energy options.
  • What the option ''Greeks'' are, and the basic concept of delta hedging.
  • The basics of the valuable put-call option parity equation,.
  • Four common ''synthetic option'' positions, and why it is valuable to know them.

Venue

Holiday Inn-Fisherman's Wharf
1300 Columbus Ave, 94133
San Francisco, CA, USA

Hotel and Seminar Information

This two-day seminar will be held at the hotel listed below. The seminar will start promptly at 8:00 AM and will finish at 5:00 PM on the first day. On the second day, the seminar will resume at 8:00 AM and will finish at 2:00 PM. The program includes continental breakfast, lunch and coffee breaks on the first day and a continental breakfast and coffee breaks on the second day. Attendees also receive a professionally produced seminar manual that can serve as a valuable office reference. Dress is casual for all seminars

Holiday Inn-Fisherman's Wharf
1300 Columbus Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94133
Telephone: 415-771-9000
View Seminar Location Website

There is a courtesy block for a limited number of rooms for $249 plus taxes for a King size or Double bed room. Please call 1-800-942-7348 and ask for the "PGS Energy Training (Code:PG8)" discount. The cut off date is July 20, 2018. Rooms sell out so make your reservations early.
Event details
Organizer : PGS
Event type : Training Course
Reference : ASDE-18545