Title: Lecture 10: Derivatives III Currency
1Lecture 10 Derivatives III Currency interest
rate swaps
- Galina A Schwartz
- Department of Finance
- University of Michigan
- Business School
2Plan of todays lecture
- Midterm follow-up
- Levich, Chapter 13
- Swaps are
- derivative securities
- redundant securities
- Main types of swap agreements
- Why do we have them?
- who could gain from them
- What drives the demand for swaps?
3Players Terminology
- Players Industry Financial Companies, Re
- The Usual suspects
- What drives the demand for swaps?
- Capital controls
- Transaction costs
- Differences in parties comparative advantage
- Market segmentation asymmetric
information - Terms Jargon
- Plain vanilla swaps
- Exotic swaps
4Swaps market characteristics
- Main types of swap agreements
- currency or interest rate
- fixed-rate or
- floating rate or
- fixed-floating interest rate swaps
- Why do we have them?
- who could gain from using them
- To hedge hedgers
- reducing risks
- To speculate speculators
- capturing arbitrage opportunities
5Pricing the Swaps
- How do we price them?
- Net present value approach
- Through calculating
- the expected discounted cash flow
- Swap associated risks
- Asymmetric
- Time varying
6Regulatory requirements
- Bank for International Settlements (BIS) imposed
- capital requirements
- A major development!
- BIS capital requirements
- Advantageous
- Simple and easy to implement
- Transparent
- Drawbacks disadvantages
- No fine tuning
- regulatory costs
7Summary of the Lecture
- Main subject swap agreements
- currency or interest rate
- Swaps are used for
- Cheap Quick
- currency and interest rate risks management
- Why do we have them?
- Who uses them?
- How do we price them?
8What is next (Lecture 11)
- A follow-up of Prof. Honeymans lecture
- International financial markets adjustment
- to the coming technical innovations
- Market power efficiency scale up or down?
- Efficiency market completeness pricing
mechanisms
9What is next (continued)
- Generalized transaction costs up or down?
- Generalized transaction costs
- -- overhead (par example infrastructure
related) costs - -- the costs resulting from the risk of
default - direct and indirect (such as legal)
- Globalization standard versus segmentation
- Scope for government intervention up or down?