Here is what I am looking at:
I would like to grow 1000 acres of HRSW. I would also like to hedge my foreign exchange risk. So here is how I look at it. All things equal, if the price demand for our HRSW remains at $4.00 US a swing in the CDN dollar will effect us as follows:
$4.00/bu US = $4.60 CDN (at .87 dollar)
$4.00/bu US = $4.12 CDN (at .97 dollar)
Basically a drop of $.48/bu if the dollar goes up to $.97.
So if I assume the the 1000 acres of HRSW will average 35 bushels per acre then I would want to be looking at protecting a possible loss of 35,000 bu x $.48 = $16,800 due to an increasing CDN dollar.
That being said (realizing the above example is over-simplified), how does a person do the math of purchasing a "call option" on the CDN dollar to protect this potential $16,800 loss. What would a producer be looking at for cost of the option, and where would we find this information?
I would like to grow 1000 acres of HRSW. I would also like to hedge my foreign exchange risk. So here is how I look at it. All things equal, if the price demand for our HRSW remains at $4.00 US a swing in the CDN dollar will effect us as follows:
$4.00/bu US = $4.60 CDN (at .87 dollar)
$4.00/bu US = $4.12 CDN (at .97 dollar)
Basically a drop of $.48/bu if the dollar goes up to $.97.
So if I assume the the 1000 acres of HRSW will average 35 bushels per acre then I would want to be looking at protecting a possible loss of 35,000 bu x $.48 = $16,800 due to an increasing CDN dollar.
That being said (realizing the above example is over-simplified), how does a person do the math of purchasing a "call option" on the CDN dollar to protect this potential $16,800 loss. What would a producer be looking at for cost of the option, and where would we find this information?
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