Fuel costs differ from labor, fleet, and airport charges; they are influenced by global commodity exchanges and geopolitics.
Airlines used to do some financial magic to keep airfare down as oil prices increased, a strategy called "fuel hedging." But they stopped. Now fliers are on the hook for a lot of the difference.
Dairy SMEs are adopting corporate‑level hedging tools to manage soaring fuel costs and geopolitical volatility as the Gulf ...
TOKYO, Oct 21 (Reuters) - Japan's budding power futures market could be set for a growth spurt as a government proposal requiring retailers to secure electricity supply as much as three years in ...