Yes, I think there is. Speculation is trading activity with the intent to profit from a change in price. Hedging -- in the sense I'm talking about -- is buying an asset to guard against a change in price or shortage. You can certainly see them as similar things, and in some sense they are, but I think there would be broad agreement that this sort of hedging does not deserve the same scorn that some have for speculators.
Even if the activity is exactly the same, most people tend to feel differently about an activity because of its motivation. The motivation to obtain large profits is held in much less respect than the motivation to guard against personal shortage. Also, corporate behaviors in general get a lower prior amount of esteem than individual and household level behaviors.
We can definitely talk about whether people ought to view these things differently, but there is little question as to whether they currently do.
Even if the activity is exactly the same, most people tend to feel differently about an activity because of its motivation. The motivation to obtain large profits is held in much less respect than the motivation to guard against personal shortage. Also, corporate behaviors in general get a lower prior amount of esteem than individual and household level behaviors.
We can definitely talk about whether people ought to view these things differently, but there is little question as to whether they currently do.