Why Freight Derivatives Are Here To Stay In The Trucking Industry

Disclaimer: FreightWaves, in collaboration with Nodal Exchange and DAT, launched the world's first Trucking Freight Futures contracts in March 2019. The author is not presently an investor in FreightWaves, or any other startups developing derivatives products for the freight trucking industry.

A financial derivative is an instrument that derives its value from the behavior of an underlying asset. Freight derivatives are financial instruments whose value is derived from the behavior of freight rates. With the exception of a few proprietary operations, the trucking industry has not made widespread use of financial derivatives in the past. That is changing, and the conditions now exist for freight trucking derivatives to become more commonplace among carriers, shippers, third-party logistics service providers (3PLs), and financial speculators. This article argues that freight derivatives are here to stay in the trucking industry.

This article will not discuss the technical aspects of valuing financial derivatives, nor will we spend time on quantitative data about derivatives markets, or freight markets for that matter – that data is easily available from FreightWaves and elsewhere. A technical discussion of the valuation of derivatives instruments falls outside the scope of this column. Rather, the only goal is to help readers of FreightWaves develop a brief, qualitative, yet adequately sophisticated understanding about why the trucking industry is ready for freight derivatives – without going into all the intricate details. While freight derivatives can be utilized in other markets, this article is written with a particular focus on the United States.

I touched briefly on the topic of derivatives in the trucking industry in; Industry Study: Freight Trucking (#Startups) (2016) and Updates – Industry Study: Freight Trucking (#Startups) (2016).

Types Of Derivatives

In this section we will briefly define forwards, futures, and options, while ignoring swaps, credit derivatives, and other types of derivative instruments. This approach makes sense because swaps and other types of derivatives are unlikely to be used until the market for forwards, futures, and options has matured considerably.

A forward contract is a bespoke, private contract between two parties that creates an obligation to buy and sell the underlying contract at a specified price at a specified date in the future. If the future freight rate is higher than the rate specified in the contract, the buyer experiences a gain while the seller experiences a loss.