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As the Chicago Mercantile Exchange offers futures on rainfall, climate prediction is becoming big business worth $15bn
Famous for its colourful open outcry trading floor, the CME specialises in agricultural commodities, energy and interest rate swaps. But a hitherto unnoticed corner of the exchange is quietly growing in value by offering futures and options based on the weather. The newly minted rainfall contracts join existing products based on snowfall, hurricanes, frost and unusual lurches in temperature. They allow investors to go long on thunderstorms, short on drizzle or insure against a deluge.
Hedging on the weather is a young business – the first weather derivative was traded in 1997 by a US power company, Aquila Energy. But trading futures and options on climatic conditions has grown to be worth more than $15bn annually according to the Weather Risk Management Association, which tracks activity. The CME says typical customers include utilities, concert promoters, sports impresarios, theme parks and any other businesses with profits highly vulnerable to the elements.
"These are for any businesses that have revenue or cost exposure that's a function of rainfall," says Tim Andriesen, the CME's head of alternative investment products. "You might have an outdoor event where attendance is important and rainfall will have a significant impact. Or an outdoor stadium for a sporting event, with the costs associated with that."
England's cricket authorities are all too aware of the problem; they once faced a storm of protest for refusing to refund Edgbaston ticket-holders for a day's play against Pakistan in which only two balls were bowled because of bad weather. And Walkers Crisps is facing a payout of more than £1m over an ongoing "rainy day" promotion fronted by Gary Lineker that has led to a deluge of winners correctly predicting rainfall in chosen locations on a map grid. Walkers' parent company, PepsiCo, has an insurance policy backed by Lloyd's of London to protect itself against an undue payout.
Last winter's heavy snowfall and prolonged icy freeze threw up another financial conundrum as local authorities ran out of grit, sending the price of salt rocketing. Britain's biggest private sector gritting company, Gritit, has waded in this year with a potential solution; it is selling weather derivatives that encourage towns and cities to take sophisticated positions hedging themselves against the financial fallout from undue frost.
Gritit has teamed up with a Swiss firm, CelsiusPro, to provide tailored "frost day certificates" that pay out after a certain number of freezing mornings.
"CelsiusPro has taken very clever software and simplified it so that even a greengrocer could buy an option for a few pounds," says Jason Petsch, commercial director of Gritit, which does extensive work for NHS hospital forecourts, construction sites and private roads. "Our interest is in using it to help our clients manage risk."
Please go to The Guardian to continue reading.
As the Chicago Mercantile Exchange starts offering rainfall futures, climate prediction is becoming big business. Photograph: Anthony Devlin/PA Archive/Press Association Ima
By Andrew Clark | November 7, 2010
Anybody reckon the heavens might open next year? Fancy taking a bet? You can do so in sophisticated fashion on the world's biggest derivatives market, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, which has begun offering multimillion-pound futures and options on rainfall.
Famous for its colourful open outcry trading floor, the CME specialises in agricultural commodities, energy and interest rate swaps. But a hitherto unnoticed corner of the exchange is quietly growing in value by offering futures and options based on the weather. The newly minted rainfall contracts join existing products based on snowfall, hurricanes, frost and unusual lurches in temperature. They allow investors to go long on thunderstorms, short on drizzle or insure against a deluge.
Hedging on the weather is a young business – the first weather derivative was traded in 1997 by a US power company, Aquila Energy. But trading futures and options on climatic conditions has grown to be worth more than $15bn annually according to the Weather Risk Management Association, which tracks activity. The CME says typical customers include utilities, concert promoters, sports impresarios, theme parks and any other businesses with profits highly vulnerable to the elements.
"These are for any businesses that have revenue or cost exposure that's a function of rainfall," says Tim Andriesen, the CME's head of alternative investment products. "You might have an outdoor event where attendance is important and rainfall will have a significant impact. Or an outdoor stadium for a sporting event, with the costs associated with that."
England's cricket authorities are all too aware of the problem; they once faced a storm of protest for refusing to refund Edgbaston ticket-holders for a day's play against Pakistan in which only two balls were bowled because of bad weather. And Walkers Crisps is facing a payout of more than £1m over an ongoing "rainy day" promotion fronted by Gary Lineker that has led to a deluge of winners correctly predicting rainfall in chosen locations on a map grid. Walkers' parent company, PepsiCo, has an insurance policy backed by Lloyd's of London to protect itself against an undue payout.
Last winter's heavy snowfall and prolonged icy freeze threw up another financial conundrum as local authorities ran out of grit, sending the price of salt rocketing. Britain's biggest private sector gritting company, Gritit, has waded in this year with a potential solution; it is selling weather derivatives that encourage towns and cities to take sophisticated positions hedging themselves against the financial fallout from undue frost.
Gritit has teamed up with a Swiss firm, CelsiusPro, to provide tailored "frost day certificates" that pay out after a certain number of freezing mornings.
"CelsiusPro has taken very clever software and simplified it so that even a greengrocer could buy an option for a few pounds," says Jason Petsch, commercial director of Gritit, which does extensive work for NHS hospital forecourts, construction sites and private roads. "Our interest is in using it to help our clients manage risk."
Please go to The Guardian to continue reading.
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