
Basis Risk
Basis risk is the financial risk that offsetting investments in a hedging strategy will not experience price changes in entirely opposite directions from each other. For example, a natural gas producer in Louisiana has locational basis risk if it decides to hedge its price risk with contracts deliverable in Colorado. Another form of basis risk is known as locational basis risk. If the Louisiana contracts are trading at $3.50 per one million British Thermal Units (MMBtu) and the Colorado contracts are trading at $3.65/MMBtu, the locational basis risk is $0.15/MMBtu. Companies making these trades are generally well aware of the product basis risk but willingly accept the risk instead of not hedging at all.

What Is Basis Risk?
Basis risk is the financial risk that offsetting investments in a hedging strategy will not experience price changes in entirely opposite directions from each other. This imperfect correlation between the two investments creates the potential for excess gains or losses in a hedging strategy, thus adding risk to the position.



Understanding Basis Risk
Offsetting vehicles are generally similar in structure to the investments being hedged, but they are still different enough to cause concern. For example, in the attempt to hedge against a two-year bond with the purchase of Treasury bill futures, there is a risk the Treasury bill and the bond will not fluctuate identically.
To quantify the amount of the basis risk, an investor simply needs to take the current market price of the asset being hedged and subtract the futures price of the contract. For example, if the price of oil is $55 per barrel and the future contract being used to hedge this position is priced at $54.98, the basis is $0.02. When large quantities of shares or contracts are involved in a trade, the total dollar amount, in gains or losses, from basis risk can have a significant impact.
Other Forms of Basis Risk
Another form of basis risk is known as locational basis risk. This is seen in the commodities markets when a contract does not have the same delivery point as the commodity's seller needs. For example, a natural gas producer in Louisiana has locational basis risk if it decides to hedge its price risk with contracts deliverable in Colorado. If the Louisiana contracts are trading at $3.50 per one million British Thermal Units (MMBtu) and the Colorado contracts are trading at $3.65/MMBtu, the locational basis risk is $0.15/MMBtu.
Product or quality basis risk arises when a contract of one product or quality is used to hedge another product or quality. An often-used example of this is jet fuel being hedged with crude oil or low sulfur diesel fuel because these contracts are far more liquid than derivatives on jet fuel itself. Companies making these trades are generally well aware of the product basis risk but willingly accept the risk instead of not hedging at all.
Calendar basis risk arises when a company or investor hedges a position with a contract that does not expire on the same date as the position being hedged. For example, RBOB gasoline futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) expire on the last calendar day of the month prior to delivery. Thus, a contract deliverable in May expires on April 30. Though this discrepancy may only be for a short period of time, basis risk still exists.
Related terms:
Basis Differential
Basis differential is the difference between the spot price of a commodity to be hedged and the futures price of the contract used. read more
Commodity Market
A commodity market is a physical or virtual marketplace for buying, selling, and trading commodities. Discover how investors profit from the commodity market. read more
Cross Hedge
Cross hedge refers to the practice of hedging risk using two assets whose price movements are positively correlated. read more
Derivative
A derivative is a securitized contract whose value is dependent upon one or more underlying assets. Its price is determined by fluctuations in that asset. read more
Futures Contract
A futures contract is a standardized agreement to buy or sell the underlying commodity or other asset at a specific price at a future date. read more
Hedge
A hedge is a type of investment that is intended to reduce the risk of adverse price movements in an asset. read more
Hedge Ratio
The hedge ratio compares the value of a position protected through the use of a hedge with the size of the entire position itself. read more
New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX)
The New York Mercantile Exchange is the world's largest physical commodity futures exchange and a part of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Group. read more
Over-Hedging
Over-hedging is a risk management strategy where an offsetting position that exceeds the original position is initiated. read more
Price Change
A price change is the difference between a security's closing price on a trading day and its closing price on the previous trading day. read more