Hedging and Accounting at EnCana Corp.
It has been recently reported in the globeandmail.com and elsewhere how EnCana's (ECA) hedging strategy "backfired" as the company recently hedged 40% of its expected 2008 natural gas production at around $8 MMBtu, while prices for natural gas are currently near $11 MMBtu.
The impact of the hedging showed up in EnCana's first quarter results as profits fell to $93 million from $497 million a year earlier, with the decrease in the first quarter resulting from unrealized hedging losses. While EnCana's 2008 hedges have not expired, mark-to-market accounting generated the balance sheet adjustments of $737 million as natural gas prices moved above the original $8 MMBtu contract price. Also mentioned is how EnCana's executives are "looking on the bright side" as the higher prices have helped the 60% of their production that is not hedged.
As usual, it is interesting how hedging is considered to have backfired when it turns out that the company would have been better off being without a hedged position. Of course, if it had turned out that $8 MMBtu was the top for natural gas prices, and Encana was now selling the majority of its 2008 production for spot prices of $6 MMBtu, then some of the same authors and many shareholders might be wondering why the company did not lock in prices when they were so high.
Rather than seeing a "backfired" strategy, Encana's approach to managing its business appears sound and stable, and less risky and foolish than one might expect.
Disclosure: None
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Apr 28 01:43 PMMore by David Enke