When
Event Type
Energy markets are complex, interconnected systems that balance physical supply and demand with financial risk management.Â
This session provides a structured understanding of how energy commodities — crude oil, natural gas, power, and environmental products — move from production to consumption, how they are priced, and how market participants manage risk and opportunity.Â
Here’s what you’ll learn: Â
- How energy markets are structuredÂ
- Who participatesÂ
- What is tradedÂ
- How prices are determinedÂ
- Why volatility existsÂ
- Where risk enters the systemÂ
This webinar builds the commercial and market foundation necessary to understand energy trading, risk management, and ETRM systems.Â
Who will benefit from this webinar: Â
- New and future market participants who need to prepare for the forthcoming engagement in wholesale and bilateral electricity markets?Â
- Current ETRM practitioners?who?are looking?to understand?not just what?they?do in the system — but what the system does for?their?entire organization?Â
- IT teams supporting ETRM systems?Â
- Compliance and internal audit teams?Â
Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, and you will receive confirmation typically within one business day. Registration ends at 10:55 a.m. CT March 12.
About the presenters:Â Â
Kevin Cox: With over 30 years’ experience in the energy and commodity trading sectors, Kevin possesses comprehensive expertise spanning the entire trade lifecycle, including trade capture, validation, confirmation, settlement, and risk management. Combining strategic leadership with hands-on involvement, Kevin has successfully guided teams and directly managed critical processes to ensure operational excellence, regulatory compliance, and optimized financial performance within the energy and commodities trading industry.
As a member of PCI’s Pre-Sales and Solutions team, Kevin leverages his extensive experience supporting clients throughout the entire energy value chain — from upstream exploration and production to midstream transportation and downstream distribution. Â