Profit at risk
Profit-at-Risk is a risk management quantity most often used for electricity portfolios that contain some mixture of generation assets, trading contracts and end-user consumption. It is used to provide a measure of the downside risk to profitability of a portfolio of physical and financial assets, analysed by time periods in which the energy is delivered. For example, the expected profitability and associated downside risk might be calculated and monitored for each of the forward looking 24 months. The measure considers both price risk and volume risk. Mathematically, the PaR is the quantile of the profit distribution of a portfolio.
Example
If the confidence interval for evaluating the PaR is 95%, there is a 5% probability that due to changing commodity volumes and prices, theprofit outcome for a specific period will fall short of the expected profit result by more than the PaR value.
Note that the concept of a set 'holding period' does not apply since the period is always up until the realisation of the profit outcome through the delivery of energy. That is the holding period is different for each of the specific delivery time periods being analysed e.g. it might be six months for December and therefore seven months for January.