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Trading Electrons: Predicting DART Spread Spikes in ISO Electricity Markets

Trading Electrons: Predicting DART Spread Spikes in ISO Electricity Markets ArXiv ID: 2601.05085 “View on arXiv” Authors: Emma Hubert, Dimitrios Lolas, Ronnie Sircar Abstract We study the problem of forecasting and optimally trading day-ahead versus real-time (DART) price spreads in U.S. wholesale electricity markets. Building on the framework of Galarneau-Vincent et al., we extend spike prediction from a single zone to a multi-zone setting and treat both positive and negative DART spikes within a unified statistical model. To translate directional signals into economically meaningful positions, we develop a structural and market-consistent price impact model based on day-ahead bid stacks. This yields closed-form expressions for the optimal vector of zonal INC/DEC quantities, capturing asymmetric buy/sell impacts and cross-zone congestion effects. When applied to NYISO, the resulting impact-aware strategy significantly improves the risk-return profile relative to unit-size trading and highlights substantial heterogeneity across markets and seasons. ...

January 8, 2026 · 2 min · Research Team

Optimal mutual insurance against systematic longevity risk

Optimal mutual insurance against systematic longevity risk ArXiv ID: 2410.07749 “View on arXiv” Authors: Unknown Abstract We mathematically demonstrate how and what it means for two collective pension funds to mutually insure one another against systematic longevity risk. The key equation that facilitates the exchange of insurance is a market clearing condition. This enables an insurance market to be established even if the two funds face the same mortality risk, so long as they have different risk preferences. Provided the preferences of the two funds are not too dissimilar, insurance provides little benefit, implying the base scheme is effectively optimal. When preferences vary significantly, insurance can be beneficial. ...

October 10, 2024 · 2 min · Research Team