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The hedging efficiency of wheat futures in various types of farms in Germany

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  • Sigl, Lukas
  • Hirschauer, Norbert

Abstract

Farmers are often advised to hedge their commodity prices on the commodity futures exchange, without sound scientific evidence to support this. This paper questions this rash advice and ana-lyzes the impact of various hedging strategies based on wheat futures for a large sample of farms in Germany. Historical simulation and a whole-farm risk approach are used to evaluate the hedging efficiency for 2,197 German farms over a 21-year study period. We use “adjusted farm profit” as perfor-mance indicator and measure which relative change in profit volatility these farms would have obtained by nine different hedging strategies. Additionally, a cluster analysis was used to find out whether there are farm types that have particularly low or high hedging efficiencies. Hedging would have only marginally reduced or even increased profit volatility in most cases and across different regions, farm types, and farm sizes. In addition, many farms would even have ex-perienced perverse effects, as hedging would not only have led to increased profit volatility, but also to a reduction in profit levels due to hedging costs and/or speculative losses. This paper presents an in-depth analysis of the effects of hedging based on wheat futures con-tracts. Unlike previous hedging studies that used synthetic farm models or rather small samples, we use a whole-farm risk approach and conduct a large-scale study of 2,197 farms over a 21-year study period. The study results cast substantial doubt on the conventional wisdom that farmers should be generally more willing to include hedging as “innovative” tool into their risk manage-ment.

Suggested Citation

  • Sigl, Lukas & Hirschauer, Norbert, 2024. "The hedging efficiency of wheat futures in various types of farms in Germany," SocArXiv pvq9t_v1, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:pvq9t_v1
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/pvq9t_v1
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