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Valuation, Hedging and Speculation in Competitive Electricity Markets - A Fundamental Approach (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2001)
Loot Price: R2,771
Discovery Miles 27 710
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Valuation, Hedging and Speculation in Competitive Electricity Markets - A Fundamental Approach (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2001)
Series: Power Electronics and Power Systems
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The challenges facing participants in competitive electricity
markets are staggering: high price volatility introduces
significant financial risk into an industry accustomed to
guaranteed rates of return, while illiquid forward markets prevent
effective hedging strategies from being implemented. Valuation,
Hedging and Speculation in Competitive Electricity Markets: A
Fundamental Approach, examines the unique properties which separate
electricity from other traded commodities, including the lack of
economical storage, and the impact of a scarce transmission
network. The authors trace the sources of uncertainties in the
price of electricity to underlying physical and economic processes,
and incorporate these into a bid-based model for electricity spot
and forward prices. They also illustrate how insufficient market
data can be circumvented by using a combination of price and load
data in the marking- to-market process.The model is applied to
three classes of problems central to the operation of any electric
utility or power marketer; valuing generation assets, formulating
dynamic hedging strategies for load serving obligations, and
pricing transmission contracts and locational spread options.
Emphasis is placed on the difference between trades which can be
'booked out' in the forward markets, and those which must be
carried through to delivery. Lately, significant attention has been
given to the role of regulators in mitigating excessive price
levels in electricity markets. The authors conduct a quantitative
analysis of the long-term effects of regulatory intervention
through the use of price caps. By modeling the dynamic interplay
between the observed price levels and the decision to invest in new
generation assets, it is shown how such short term fixes can lead
to long term deficits in the available generation capacity, and
ultimately to market failures and blackouts.
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