

Fuel Hedging is a contractual tool used by some airlines to stabilize jet fuel costs. A fuel hedge contract commits an airline to paying a pre-determined price for future jet fuel purchases. Airlines enter into such contracts as a bet that future jet fuel prices will be higher than current prices or to reduce the turbulence of confronting future expenses of unknown size. If the price of jet fuel falls and the airline hedged for a higher price, the airline will be forced to pay an above-market rate for jet fuel.
In short fuel hedging is hard to understand and even harder to get right, especially in the past year with prices as volatile as they have been. We have seen the complete crumbling of the Indian airline industry due to rampant fuel prices.

Flightglobal has put together an interesting selection of articles in case you are interested in fuel hedging.
This article from John Bowker at Reuters sets out the current state of play on airline hedging.
Flightglobal's Kerry Ezard's article sets out what airlines were doing when oil was at or around its peak of $140+ a barrel.
There are the US carriers like Southwest and United that have had to account for losses in their fuel hedge contracts.
And while oil prices have retreated, this article raises the disturbing question "Can airlines survive $200-a-barrel oil?"
As ever, when people try to second guess the market, the potential for error is huge, but the events of the past year have made the topic of fuel hedging so critical.
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