Enron Mail

From:john.arnold@enron.com
To:tom.wilbeck@enron.com
Subject:Re: technical help for interviewing traders
Cc:
Bcc:
Date:Thu, 29 Mar 2001 11:10:00 -0800 (PST)

In regards to gas:
what signals do you for in determining your view?
what resources do you use to formulate a price view?
give example of complex transaction you've structured for a customer.
where is storage now relative to history? what is the highest and lowest
level we've been at in past 5 years?
what are your short, medium, and long term views of gas market?
what major basis changes have occured in the market over the past 5 years?
What do you expect in the next 5?
how should a storage operator decide whether or not to inject on any given
day?

In regards to derivatives in order of difficulty
What are delta/gamma/theta?
if you buy a put spread, is your delta positive, negative, or zero?
Is swap price equal to simple average of futures contracts?
If interest rates go up what happens to option prices all else equal?
what is the value of a european $1 call expiring in 12 months if
corresponding futures are trading $5?
what happens to delta of an option if volatility increase?




From: Tom Wilbeck/ENRON@enronXgate on 03/23/2001 03:35 PM
To: John Arnold/HOU/ECT@ECT, Hunter S Shively/HOU/ECT@ECT, Phillip K
Allen/HOU/ECT@ECT
cc:
Subject: technical help for interviewing traders

Jeanie Slone was telling me that you were among the best interviewers in the
trading group. Because of your expertise in this area, I was wondering if
you could help me put some technical questions together that you've found to
be effective in interviewing Gas Traders.

Norma Hasenjager is in our Omaha office needs this information ASAP in order
to help her screen some candidates. It would be great if you could respond
to this with two or three questions that you've used in the past to select
good Gas Traders.

Thanks for your help.

Tom Wilbeck
EWS Training and Development