Risk across Time Horizons
Term Structure of Risk describes how uncertainty and exposure differ across short-, medium-, and long-term horizons.
Near-term risk is often dominated by inventories, logistics, and discrete events. Longer-term risk reflects investment decisions, regulatory developments, technological shifts, and structural supply-demand balance.
Why the term structure matters
Analyzing risk across maturities helps organizations to:
- identify where uncertainty is concentrated
- align forecasts with planning and decision horizons
- avoid extrapolating short-term stress into long-term assumptions
Risk is rarely evenly distributed across time.
Risk across horizons
Markets may exhibit high short-term volatility while longer-term expectations remain stable, or vice versa. Ignoring this distinction can distort both forecast interpretation and risk management decisions.
You may also be interested in:
Commodity expert, data scientist, or decision-maker?
Join us in building the next generation of tools for forecasting and risk intelligence.