2011
DOI: 10.1287/mnsc.1110.1357
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Hedging and Vertical Integration in Electricity Markets

Abstract: This paper analyzes the interactions between competitive (wholesale) spot, retail, and forward markets and vertical integration in electricity markets. We develop an equilibrium model with producers, retailers, and traders to study and quantify the impact of forward markets and vertical integration on prices, risk premia, and retail market shares. We point out that forward hedging and vertical integration are two separate mechanisms for demand and spot price risk diversification that both reduce the retail pri… Show more

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Cited by 63 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…Our result can be interpreted as stating that catastrophe risk information produced in financial markets under present conditions would be primarily in the nature of foreknowledge. Our focus on information production costs complements Aïd et al (2011) focus on risk aversion as limiting the use of financial markets for the purpose of transferring risk. The authors consider the electricity market; electricity's non-storable nature introduces an asymmetry between the production and retail sectors' exposures to demand risk.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Our result can be interpreted as stating that catastrophe risk information produced in financial markets under present conditions would be primarily in the nature of foreknowledge. Our focus on information production costs complements Aïd et al (2011) focus on risk aversion as limiting the use of financial markets for the purpose of transferring risk. The authors consider the electricity market; electricity's non-storable nature introduces an asymmetry between the production and retail sectors' exposures to demand risk.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The authors consider the electricity market; electricity's non-storable nature introduces an asymmetry between the production and retail sectors' exposures to demand risk. They show that vertical integration restores symmetry between producers and retailers' exposure, whereas linear forward contracts do not; they conclude that ''[v]ertical integration is superior to forward hedging when retailers are highly risk averse'' (Aïd et al, 2011(Aïd et al, , p. 1438.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More sophisticated methods use stochastic control techniques to take full advantage of the optionality of the plant. See for example [30,3]. Moreover, some of these methods have been extended to value gas storage and we refer the interested reader to [28,27,50,77].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This in turn implies that the project needs to obtain additional support to break even and hence directly translates into additional deployment costs. While we focus the subsequent discussion on investments through project finance, the analysis and results holds similarly for vertically-integrated companies, as Finon (2008) describes how long-term contracts between generators and retailers and vertical integration are substitutes to establish the required long-term cash flow security, and Aïd et al (2011) argue that which construct will prevail depends on the degree of uncertainty.…”
Section: The Role Of Long-term Contracts For Renewable Energy Investmmentioning
confidence: 99%