Title: Futures and Forward Markets
1Chapter 19
Futures and Forward Markets
2Chapter Summary
- Objective To describe the workings of futures
markets and the mechanics of trading in these
markets. - Trading mechanics
- Futures pricing
- Different types of futures contracts
- Swaps
3Futures and Forwards
- Forward - an agreement calling for a future
delivery of an asset at an agreed-upon price - Futures - similar to forward but feature
formalized and standardized characteristics - Key difference in futures
- Secondary trading - liquidity
- Marked to market
- Standardized contract units
- Clearinghouse warrants performance
4Key Terms for Futures Contracts
- Futures price - agreed-upon price at maturity
- Long position - agree to purchase
- Short position - agree to sell
- Profits on positions at maturity
- Long spot minus original futures price
- Short original futures price minus spot
5Profits Futures Buyers and Call Buyers
Futures Buyer
Profit
Call Buyer
0
Price
Fo
6Profits Futures Sellers and Put Buyers
7Types of Contracts
- Agricultural commodities
- Metals and minerals (including energy contracts)
- Foreign currencies
- Financial futures
- Interest rate futures
- Stock index futures
8Summary Reminder
- Objective To describe the workings of futures
markets and the mechanics of trading in these
markets. - Trading mechanics
- Futures pricing
- Different types of futures contracts
- Swaps
9Trading Mechanics
- Clearinghouse - acts as a party to all buyers and
sellers. - Obligated to deliver or supply delivery
- Closing out positions
- Reversing the trade
- Take or make delivery
- Most trades are reversed and do not involve
actual delivery
10Margin and Trading Arrangements
- Initial Margin - funds deposited to provide
capital to absorb losses - Marking to Market - each day the profits or
losses from the new futures price are reflected
in the account. - Maintenance or variation margin - an established
value below which a traders margin may not fall.
11Margin and Trading Arrangements
- Margin call - when the maintenance margin is
reached, broker will ask for additional margin
funds - Convergence of Price - as maturity approaches the
spot and futures price converge - Delivery - Actual commodity of a certain grade
with a delivery location or for some contracts
cash settlement
12Trading Strategies
- Speculation
- short - believe price will fall
- long - believe price will rise
- Hedging
- long hedge - protecting against a rise in price
- short hedge - protecting against a fall in price
13Basis and Basis Risk
- Basis - the difference between the futures price
and the spot price - over time the basis will likely change and will
eventually converge - Basis Risk - the variability in the basis that
will affect profits and/or hedging performance
14Summary Reminder
- Objective To describe the workings of futures
markets and the mechanics of trading in these
markets. - Trading mechanics
- Futures pricing
- Different types of futures contracts
- Swaps
15Futures Pricing
- Spot-futures parity theorem - two ways to acquire
an asset for some date in the future - Purchase it now and store it
- Take a long position in futures
- These two strategies must have the same market
determined costs
16Spot-Futures Parity Theorem
- With a perfect hedge the futures payoff is
certain - there is no risk - A perfect hedge should return the riskless rate
of return - This relationship can be used to develop futures
pricing relationship
17Hedge Example(text, pp.731-732)
- Investor owns an SP/TSE 60 fund that has a
current value equal to the index of 400 - Assume dividends of 5 will be paid on the index
at the end of the year - Assume futures contract that calls for delivery
in one year is available for 408 - Assume the investor hedges by selling or shorting
one contract
18Hedge Example -Outcomes
Value of ST 380 405 420 Payoff on Short
(408 - ST) 28 3 -12 Dividend Income
5 5 5 Total 413 413 413
19Rate of Return for the Hedge
20General Spot-Futures Parity
Rearranging terms
21Arbitrage Possibilities
- If spot-futures parity is not observed, then
arbitrage is possible - If the futures price is too high, short the
futures and acquire the stock by borrowing the
money at the risk-free rate - If the futures price is too low, go long futures,
short the stock and invest the proceeds at the
risk-free rate
22Commodity Futures Pricing
General principles that apply to stock apply to
commodities Carrying costs are more for
commodities Spoilage is a concern
Where F0 futures price P0 cash price
of the asset C Carrying cost c C/P0
23Futures Price versusExpected Spot Price Theories
- Expectations
- Normal Backwardation
- Contango
24Futures Price versusExpected Spot Price Theories
25Summary Reminder
- Objective To describe the workings of futures
markets and the mechanics of trading in these
markets. - Trading mechanics
- Futures pricing
- Different types of futures contracts
- Swaps
26Stock Index Contracts
- Available on both domestic and international
stocks - Advantages over direct stock purchase
- lower transaction costs
- better for timing or allocation strategies
- takes less time to acquire the portfolio
27Using Stock Index Contracts to Create Synthetic
Positions
- Synthetic stock purchase
- Purchase of the stock index instead of actual
shares of stock - Creation of a synthetic T-bill plus index futures
that duplicates the payoff of the stock index
contract
28Pricing on Stock Index Contracts
- The spot-futures price parity is given as
- Empirical investigations have shown that the
actual pricing relationship on index contracts
follows the spot-futures relationship
29Index Arbitrage
- Exploiting mispricing between underlying stocks
and the futures index contract - Futures Price too high - short the future and buy
the underlying stocks - Futures price too low - long the future and short
sell the underlying stocks
30Index Arbitrage and Program Trading
- Difficult to implement in practice
- Transactions costs are often too large
- Trades cannot be done simultaneously
- Development of Program Trading
- Used by arbitrageurs to perform index arbitrage
- Permits acquisition of securities quickly
- Triple-witching hour
- Evidence that index arbitrage impacts volatility
31Foreign Exchange Futures
- Futures markets
- Chicago Mercantile (International Monetary
Market) - London International Financial Futures Exchange
- MidAmerica Commodity Exchange
- Active forward market
- Differences between futures and forward markets
32Pricing on Foreign Exchange Futures
- Interest rate parity theorem
- Developed using the US Dollar and British Pound
where, F0 is the forward price E0 is the current
exchange rate
33Text Pricing Example
rCAN 6 ruk 5 T 1 yr E0 1.60 per
pound
- If the futures price varies from 2.12 per pound
arbitrage opportunities will be present
34Interest Rate Futures
- Domestic interest rate contracts
- T-bills, notes and bonds
- municipal bonds
- International contracts
- Eurodollar
- Hedging
- Underwriters
- Firms issuing debt
35Hedging Interest Rate Risk
- Owners of fixed-income portfolios protecting
against a rise in rates - Corporations planning to issue debt securities
protecting against a rise in rates - Investor hedging against a decline in rates for a
planned future investment - Exposure for a fixed-income portfolio is
proportional to modified duration
36Summary Reminder
- Objective To describe the workings of futures
markets and the mechanics of trading in these
markets. - Trading mechanics
- Futures pricing
- Different types of futures contracts
- Swaps
37Swaps
- Interest rate swap
- Foreign exchange swap
- Credit risk on swaps
- Swap Variations
- Interest rate cap
- Interest rate floor
- Collars
- Swaptions
38Pricing on Swap Contracts
- Swaps are essentially a series of forward
contracts - One difference is that the swap is usually
structured with the same payment each period
while the forward rate would be different each
period - Using a foreign exchange swap as an example, the
swap pricing would be described by the following
formula