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Exposure

Amount of risk a position has to an underlying factor (price, FX, rates, vol); often measured by delta, DV01 or notional.

Exposure refers to the degree to which a trading position, portfolio, or business is sensitive to changes in an underlying variable such as price, interest rates, volatility, or foreign exchange. In energy markets, exposure can arise from physical assets, futures, swaps, options, or structured contracts. For example, a refinery may have exposure to crude oil prices, refined product prices, crack spreads, and currency movements simultaneously. Exposure can be directional, meaning it benefits from price moves in one direction, or relative, such as spread exposure between two related markets. Traders and risk managers quantify exposure using measures such as notional value, delta, gamma, or value-at-risk, depending on the instrument. Managing exposure is central to trading discipline, as excessive or unintended exposure can result in outsized losses during volatile market conditions. Exposure management involves hedging, diversification, position sizing, and continuous monitoring. In energy markets, where prices can move sharply due to geopolitical or weather events, understanding exposure is essential for maintaining financial stability and avoiding forced liquidation.