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dashocho said:PS: We all got off probation today!!!!!!!!!
radarlove said:Um, no, I guess you don't understand hedges. You can't "rework" them. Most of the hedges the airlines do are simply futures contracts. A futures contract is today's spot price, which is around $59/bbl, plus the cost of interest on the money for the lengh of the futures contract.
So, there isn't some special place that only LUV knows about to go buy oil for less than $59/bbl. They might be hedging some at $59+, but probably not too much.
Jim Smyth said:As they said in Animal House..................
"Now you go on double secret probation!"![]()
Please don't argue finance if you don't even understand a futures contract.ivauir said:Actually, your understanding of the hedges is incomplete, they do NOT reflect todays price
No, the futures price is based on today's spot price plus the cost to borrow money for the length of the contract. If it were off, there would be an arbitrage opportunity.but instead what someone thinks the price will be in the future.
This doesn't make any sense. What do you mean, "only takes cash"? Was that an attempt at a joke?As a result we are constantly "reworking" our fuel hedges; our finance department watches the market and takes advantage of fluctuations as they occur. The "special place" that only LUV knows is the place that takes only cash.
Sure they are, if I remember the financial press, your company stopped hedging as the price rose significantly. The hedges, in fact, "run out". Because next, you say:The hedges are not "runnig out", they just aren't at $26 a barrel anymore.
As a matter of fact, we have just added some hedges through 08, and we didn't pay 59 (I can't remember the price)
Ok, easy enough there big guy. Find me one quoted futures price that is below today's price. If those "traders" exist, then surely you can find the price?. Basically there are still enough traders willing to bet that the price will fall that we can still hedge below the current market price.
7S3W7A said:ivauir just got bitch slapped.
7S3W7A said:ivauir just got bitch slapped.
"That’s what a hedge does for us. Just like you would not want to be without health and life insurance, Southwest would not want to be unprotected against soaring fuel costs. Hedging allows us to better plan for our future and take more control of our destiny."radarlove said:Um, no, I guess you don't understand hedges. You can't "rework" them. Most of the hedges the airlines do are simply futures contracts. A futures contract is today's spot price, which is around $59/bbl, plus the cost of interest on the money for the lengh of the futures contract.
So, there isn't some special place that only LUV knows about to go buy oil for less than $59/bbl. They might be hedging some at $59+, but probably not too much.
radarlove said:Please don't argue finance if you don't even understand a futures contract.
Here's some homework: go find a futures contract that trades for less than today's price. Yeah, your company couldn't find one either.
No, the futures price is based on today's spot price plus the cost to borrow money for the length of the contract. If it were off, there would be an arbitrage opportunity.
This doesn't make any sense. What do you mean, "only takes cash"? Was that an attempt at a joke?
Sure they are, if I remember the financial press, your company stopped hedging as the price rose significantly. The hedges, in fact, "run out". Because next, you say:
Why don't you read your own company's financial information? They have a whole paragraph describing the length of the hedges. Hint: they run out.
The reason you don't know the price is because they didn't tell you the price, unless you work in the finance department, which you apparently don't, since you don't understand futures pricing.
Ok, easy enough there big guy. Find me one quoted futures price that is below today's price. If those "traders" exist, then surely you can find the price?
firstthird said:Ivauir is right on this one. We keep adding new hedges for the future and they are NOT at 59 a barrel or close. Last I read we were 30% hedged in 2009 at around 35 a barrel or maybe 39 (but no where near todays or last weeks or anything in the last 6 months spot prices).
iflyfred said:This took about 1 minute and 22 seconds to find in the most recent quaterly report filed with the SEC:
The Company currently has a mixture of purchased call options, collar structures, and fixed price swap agreements in place to hedge approximately 85 percent of its remaining 2005 total anticipated jet fuel requirements. These positions are capped at crude oil prices of $26 per barrel and the Company has also hedged the refinery margins on the majority of those positions. As of September 30, 2005, the “spot” market price for a barrel of crude oil was over $66. The Company is over 70 percent hedged for 2006 at
approximately $36 per barrel and has also hedged the refinery margins on most of those positions. The Company is also over 55 percent hedged for 2007 at approximately $37 per barrel, approximately 35 percent hedged for 2008 at approximately $37 per barrel, and approximately 30 percent hedged for 2009 at approximately $39 per barrel.
dashocho said:Jack, be careful where you plant your hedges. If you plant them in Philly, the US Airways guys may not like it. Don't plant them by DFW, American guys will not be happy. Denver seems like a good place to plant? Well, I think you're getting the point. If I were you, plant barley! Then everyone will be happy come harvest time. If your crop burns again, call it a stout or a porter when you're done. Till then, may all your beers be cold and every woman that crosses your path look as good as when we leave the bar at 2 am!!!!!
radarlove said:Hey big guy, still waiting for you to come up with some examples of futures prices that are lower than today's prices.