By Robert Mullin
FERC last week approved a request by CAISO to eliminate from its Tariff a long-suspended provision establishing convergence bidding at scheduling points on the interties into California.
The commission’s order eliminated the prospect that CAISO would reinstate a market mechanism it revoked within months of implementing it in 2011 (ER15-1451-001). At the time, the ISO’s Market Monitor determined that bidding strategies at the interties underpinned a complex scheme to manipulate prices and inflate payouts in other areas of the California market.
CAISO has in recent years explored reviving the mechanism in light of structural changes in Western markets, but it ultimately sought a full repeal based on concerns that illiquidity in 15-minute trading left intertie points vulnerable to gaming.
FERC’s ruling did not affect convergence bidding at points inside the ISO balancing area. At the request of municipal utilities in Anaheim, Azusa, Banning, Colton, Pasadena and Riverside, FERC also directed CAISO to delete from its Tariff an additional reference to virtual bidding in order to avoid ambiguity.
Convergence — or virtual — bidding allows market participants to hedge their physical positions and limit exposure to day-ahead and real-time price differentials. A convergence bid is a purely financial bid implying no obligation to take or deliver electricity. Instead, a market participant buys or sells “virtual” energy in the day-ahead market, a position required to be automatically liquidated in the opposite direction in real time.
Depending on the relative movements in the two markets, the participant either pockets or pays the difference between the two prices. Bidders are not required to control physical resources or serve loads in the ISO, allowing speculators to take positions in the market.
RTOs have adopted convergence bidding under the theory that the practice narrows the gap between day-ahead and real-time prices as traders arbitrage spreads between the two markets. The benefit is a more predictable spot market, protecting utilities from price swings stemming from load fluctuations and unplanned generating outages.
Troubled from the Start
In California, convergence bidding was fraught with problems since CAISO introduced the practice two years after restoring its day-ahead market. A week after implementing the market in February 2011, CAISO suspended bidding at nodes on nine interties linked to the Mountain States region because of a software glitch that risked overscheduling those points in the physical day-ahead market.
That incident was followed months later by the more serious discovery that some CAISO market participants were using virtual supply bids on the interties to offset virtual demand bids at nodes located just inside the state, a gaming strategy that produced no benefit for the physical market and cost the ISO more than $50 million.
(Virtual trades at CAISO’s New Melones intertie are at the center of market manipulation allegations filed by FERC in December. The defendant last week asked FERC to compel CAISO to disclose information about market design flaws (IN16-2). See earlier story, FERC Seeks $2.5M Fine in CAISO Market Manipulation.)
The strategy was facilitated by predictable differences in prices stemming from what the ISO referred to as a “bifurcated” settlement process, with the interties settled at the hour-ahead price and internal points in real time. Shortly after identifying the issue, CAISO suspended bidding at the interties indefinitely — or at least until it could resolve the bifurcation issue.
Liquidity Concerns
That goal would ultimately elude CAISO. While FERC Order 764 — which mandated 15-minute scheduling between neighboring balancing areas — should have helped, the ISO became concerned about declining short-term trading volumes at the interties, which could reintroduce opportunities for strategic bidding. A 2015 report from the ISO’s Market Monitor indicated that “most of the dozens of CAISO interties have no market participants providing economic bids in the 15-minute market and only a few interties have multiple market participants providing such bids.”
CAISO hoped Bonneville Power Administration’s implementation of 15-minute scheduling — synching it with CAISO’s schedule — would boost exports from the Pacific Northwest. But the change had little impact on trading activity.
“The CAISO does not yet understand the causes of this low market liquidity,” the grid operator wrote in an April 2015 filing asking FERC to extend the suspension of convergence bidding on the interties. “Based on informal feedback from market participants, the CAISO believes that some of the possible causes may be neighboring balancing areas not supporting 15-minute schedule changes, difficulty in procuring transmission in 15-minute blocks, an absence of bilateral trading at a 15-minute granularity and reticence of resource owners to adjust their output within the hour.”
According to a report by CAISO’s Department of Market Monitoring (DMM), low 15-minute liquidity could translate into a situation in which convergence bids would first settle at a day-ahead market price that includes intertie congestion, then be liquidated at a 15-minute market price not subject to congestion because of light physical volumes. That would give bidders incentive to profit from the structural differences between congestion prices in the day-ahead market and the 15-minute market.
“Regardless of the causes,” CAISO wrote in its April 2015 filing, “based on DMM’s recent analysis, the CAISO has determined that the existence of such low market liquidity, as evidenced by the lack of economic bids submitted in the 15-minute market, makes it problematic to reinstate intertie virtual bidding.”