Revisiting the Hedging Positions of Oil Producers

Stuart School of Business research presentation by: Associate Professor of Finance聽Yiwei Fang, Associate Professor of Finance聽Sang Baum (Solomon)聽Kang, and You Lu, Stuart Ph.D. student

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91制片厂 Tech Downtown Campus, 565 W. Adams St., 4th Floor, Chicago, IL

Revisiting the Hedging Positions of Oil Producers

  • Associate Professor of Finance Yiwei Fang
  • Associate Professor of Finance Sang Baum (Solomon) Kang
  • You Lu, Stuart Ph.D. student

Abstract:

Large efforts have been devoted to study corporate hedging activities and firm value. However, several research questions remain unanswered. Do the known determinants for hedging explain up-to-date empirical regularities for firms鈥 hedging activities? Do firms鈥 hedging behaviors change after the financial crisis? Are there any other factors that help explain firms鈥 hedging activities? Do the hedging activities add to the firm value? To answer these questions, we revisit the hedging positions of U.S. oil producers. Our evidence supports that the rationale to hedge is related to financing decision and does not support the tax benefit hypothesis. In particular, the likelihood of hedging is related to a firm鈥檚 financing cost, financial distress cost, and a firm鈥檚 business concentration. We distinguish between pure upstream firms and firms with diversified business segments. We separately analyze the effects of hedgings on firm value by different sub-periods (i.e., before crisis & after crisis and high OVX & low OVX). We identify that the firm鈥檚 hedging activities help increase firm value by stabilizing the sensitivity of firm value to oil price volatility for firms that mainly concentrate on oil production business.

 

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