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Original Articles

Hedging price risk when no direct hedge vehicle exists: the case of silicon

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Abstract

Silicon has wide applications in the electronic, ferrous foundry and chemical industries but does not possess a well-developed forward or futures market. Here we investigate potential candidates to cross-hedge silicon’s price risk. Our results show that a proxy for a newly introduced Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) ferrous contract, iron and steel scrap, explains close to 60% of the variation in silicon price changes. Estimated Generalized Least Squares (EGLS) estimations of hedge ratios are shown to produce more consistent hedge-effectiveness over OLS counterparts. Thus, it appears that the ferrous contract could fulfil this role.

JEL Classification:

Notes

1 A recent US Geological Survey (Citation2011) finds that only about 2% of total elemental Silicon (5–10% of metallurgical grade silicon) is used in electronics (also see Sidor et al. (Citation2012), Cahn (Citation2009) and Emsley (Citation2011)).

2 For more information see the CME press release, ‘CME Group Announces Launch of US Midwest Scrap (AMM) Futures’, 17 August 2012.

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